DJ Spooky's 'Rebirth of a Nation' is an admirable fusion film in its own right.
DJ Spooky's Rebirth of a Nation (2009)
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Reviews Counted:5
Fresh:4
Rotten:1
Average Rating:7.2/10
Theatrical Release:Jun 22, 2009 Limited
Synopsis:
The Museum of Modern Art presents DJ Spooky’s Rebirth of a
Nation, a weeklong run of composer, multimedia artist, and writer Paul D. Miller’s (a.k.a DJ
Spooky That Subliminal Kid) film Rebirth of...
The Museum of Modern Art presents DJ Spooky’s Rebirth of a
Nation, a weeklong run of composer, multimedia artist, and writer Paul D. Miller’s (a.k.a DJ
Spooky That Subliminal Kid) film Rebirth of a
Nation (2008), a deconstruction and remix of
D.W. Griffith’s highly controversial but landmark The Birth of a Nation (1915), from June 22
through 28, 2009. As one of the critical repositories of the work of D.W. Griffith, MoMA will
provide audiences the opportunity to experience Miller's reworking of this American masterwork in
the context of the original with two screenings of MoMA’s print of The Birth of a Nation on June 25
and June 27.
Rebirth of a
Nation was originally commissioned as a live, multimedia performance that
premiered at the Lincoln Center Festival in New York (2008) and was subsequently performed at
more than 50 international venues, including the Festival d’Automne á Paris, the Spoleto Festival
USA, and the Vienna Festwochen.
For the theatrical film version, produced by Starz Media/Anchor Bay Films, Miller takes
Griffith’s original work, which is set during and after the American Civil War and provoked
controversy for its treatment of white supremacy and its positive portrayal of the Ku Klux Klan,
and applies a "DJ re-mix.” Using his skills as a DJ to mash music and film techniques, he recontextualizes
Griffith’s achievement and places the original film in a moral framework, drawing
striking parallels between socio-political conflicts in America during Griffith’s era and today. The
film features Miller’s original score, performed and recorded by the Kronos Quartet.
Miller will be present to introduce the opening night screening on June 22, and will
participate in a post-screening discussion.
Paul D. Miller (American, b. 1970) is a composer, multimedia artist, and writer, whose
work has been seen in a wide variety of contexts, including the Whitney Biennial (1997/2001);
The Venice Biennial for Architecture (2000); the Ludwig Museum, Cologne; Kunsthalle, Vienna;
The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh, and the Art Basel Miami Beach fair (2007). He is the
author of two books, Rhythm Science (2004) and Sound Unbound (2008), and has produced
notable compilations, remixes, and collections of music. --© MoMA NY
Director: DJ Spooky
Director: DJ Spooky
Composer: DJ Spooky, Kronos Quartet
Studio: MoMA
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Reviews for DJ Spooky's Rebirth of a Nation
Despite its verbose flaws, the work is a succinct sampling of performance-art-meets-multimedia. When the film is left to its own devices and giddied-up by the scratching and booming base there’s genuine verve jumping off the screen.
Can Spooky's version of Gone with the Wind be far behind, edited so that Rhett Butler and the rest of the Rebels get exactly what they deserve?
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