In “Nam June Paik: Moon is the Oldest TV” director Amanda Kim tells the story of the visual art pioneer. Kim traces Arnold Schoenberg and John Cage influence not only Paik’s musical art, but his visual work as well. She shows how the poor reception by German critics to his early experiments with televisions drove him to NYC, where he found himself working with some of the luminaries of downtown Manhattan’s best of the 1960s: not only Cage, but Merce Cunningham and Allen Ginsberg among many others.. And she traces his ultimate success both in the art world and beyond, notably on public television. The Paik who emerges seeks to show how the media that seemed bound to lead to corporate control and division could ultimately bring the world’s inhabitants together.
“Nam June Paik: Moon is the Oldest TV” is distributed by Greenwich Entertainment and will open at the Film Forum in New York on March 24th.
Hidden Gem: Town Bloody Hall
Follow:
@topdocspod on Instagram and twitter
The Presenting Sponsor of “Top Docs” is Netflix.
”King Coal” with Elaine McMillion Sheldon
”Children of the Mist” with Diem Ha Le
”Hidden Letters” with Violet Du Feng
”House Made of Splinters” with Simon Lereng Wilmont
Sundance 2023 Lineup Rundown with Basil Tsiokos
2023 Oscar Shortlist with Anne Thompson
”Impact Filmmaking” with Chris Temple
”What We Leave Behind” with Iliana Sosa
”Retrograde” with Matthew Heineman
”I Didn’t See You There” with Reid Davenport
”Sr.” with Chris Smith
”Bad Axe” with David Siev
”Good Night Oppy” with Ryan White
”All the Beauty and the Bloodshed” with Laura Poitras
”In Her Hands” with Tamana Ayazi & Marcel Mettelsiefen
”Is that Black Enough for You?” with Elvis Mitchell
”All that Breathes” with Shaunak Sen
”Last Flight Home” with Ondi Timoner
”Documentary Now!” with Alex Buono, Rhys Thomas & Seth Meyers
”Descendant” with Margaret Brown
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The Multiverse Fancast
Cinema: A to B
I Finally Watched...
Kill James Bond!
Pod Meets World