so, yesterday, i attended (for the second time in my long life) a theater play of "Handa Gote Research and Development".neon noirickykino wrote: ↑Sun Jun 27, 2021 4:30 pm viewtopic.php?p=33331#p33331
last weekend i saw two exhibitions.
1/ there is a local theater troupe called "Handa Gote Research and Development".
http://handagote.com/en/handa-gote/
to celebrate their 15 yrs on stage (2005-2020) they exhibited (in a "cabinet of curiosities" fashion) all kinds of paraphernalia they used in their theater plays in the last 15 years.
https://www.techlib.cz/en/2746-gallery-ntk
there were many intriguing objects and i did 112 photos.
(btw. as far as i remember i attended their theater play only once in the past and seeing all those items i felt i missed a lot not going to see them on stage more often.)
it was called "Two Notebooks".
the stage was basically a retro living room.
one protagonist was recalling an amateur film he made (and lost) in the past.
two protagonists were giving side notes to his account.
two notebooks (with storyboard, scenic notes, etc.) — giving the title to the play — were the main residue that was left from the (lost) film.
the audience was (during the play) thoroughly informed about this non-existent (lost) film.
the storyboard was shown and commented in detail.
various film tricks from the (lost) film were explained and reconstructed in snippets of new films (to demonstrate the visuals of the original (lost) film) — all this with references to Mélies or Karel Zeman.
all kinds of retro books about the film were quoted — to demonstrate the erudition of the author (that he didn't make his amateur film uninformed).
the most ridiculous item from all those retro books was a diagram made allegedly by Orson Welles that was showing his perception of the types of films in a simple (ridiculous) scheme.
short interviews with ppl who played in the (lost) film were screened (they shared their memories of the (lost) film and the filmmaking process).
we were also shown a short film that was made of the leftovers of the original (lost) film — the snippets that were left aside during the editing process were glued together and screened.
after the play, the audience was invited to enter the stage and inspect all the items left of the (lost) film and used in the play.
pics above i just randomly grabbed on the interweb but the following pics are my own (that i did during my stage inspection).
these are snapshots showing the details of the storyboard.
the genre of the film was allegedly a blend of western, adventure, thriller, sci-fi.
the story was as follows.
alien finds the earthlings' message on the plague inserted in the Pioneer spaceship (the plage used in the film was remade during the play and was shown to the audience) — btw. in the (lost) film the plague is allegedly wrongly said to be from Voyager spaceship.
alien disinterprets the message and gets pissed off.
angry alien (dressed in a golden space suit) sits on his alien spaceship (for this purpose was used a heater — alien was riding a heater like riding a pony) and flies to earth.
btw. angry alien was played by director's dad (his recent memories of playing alien in the (lost) film were screened).
btw. golden space suit of the alien (from the lost film) was not lost and thus was shown during the play (i saw it on my very eyes!).
when angry alien reaches the earth, he uses an alien device by which he is able to revive dead.
and with the help of these zombies, he attempts to make humans (still alive) extinct (dead).
this is the point-of-view of the main actor of the play (director of the lost movie) that i was able to assume for a moment after the play — after entering the stage to inspect everything (i.e. a snapshot from the narrator's perspective — viz the very first pic above).