First published at 10:40 UTC on August 7th, 2020.
Moydolf Dada Art part 7 dedicated to Roger Waters and Maram Susli.
Special thanks to Maram Susli (Syrian Girl), Vanessa Beeley and Eva Barlett who are powerful beautiful women who will one day be a big influence to my daughter and many other childre…
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Moydolf Dada Art part 7 dedicated to Roger Waters and Maram Susli.
Special thanks to Maram Susli (Syrian Girl), Vanessa Beeley and Eva Barlett who are powerful beautiful women who will one day be a big influence to my daughter and many other children.
"Once you give a charlatan power over you, you almost never get it back".-Carl Sagan
“The masses have never thirsted after truth. Whoever can supply them with illusions is easily their master; whoever attempts to destroy their illusions is always their victim.” — Gustave Le Bon, The Crowd, 1895
- = Moydolf Dada Art = -
A hypnotic crude disjointed avant garde documentary/collage. The visuals and animations are both disturbingly absurd, degrading and beautiful; accompanied by a rich and powerful listening tapestry ranging from classical music to dissonant messed up quadrospazzed techno. It's certainly an interesting sonic journey.
The film is somewhat a psychedelic diary into the mind of a non conformist art collective in London consisting of bizarre characters lurking in the background such as Mouflaf (photographer), Moon (writer), Flowerpunkchip (editor), Tickleroid (painter) and Nicos (musician) who all clearly loath all forms of copyright and censorship.
The film might not have a plot, and the script was probably more like an outline of the various real life sequences mixed with political news clips. There are no actors, no story per se and yet there is unconventional drama surrounding one of the artist's father with dementia. Of course, there isn't a story but more of a mounting disbelief at what our species is capable of.
This bizarre documentary film will never see the light of day but I could easily see this played in a gallery somehow.
Give this a watch, even if only once. It's a unique film/documentary/diary, and I feel like each person needs to have a surreal, ethereal experience which this film attempts to provide.
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