Philip Hoffman:
A Life In Films by Ilppo
Pohjola
"You
look like Christ coming up that hill."
These
were the first words Robert Frank said to Phillip Hoffman when he was visiting
the photographer in
"We
were driving with a '67 Dodge... And I only knew where he
was staying from his photographs but I wasn't sure of its exact location.
We drove around and asked the way there, and they didn't know. Finally we
picked up a hitchhiker, who appears in Frank's film Pull My Daisy, and he told me how to get there.
We
stopped at the bottom of the hill and I started to walk across it. And walking
up the hill I noticed there was a man sitting and looking out to the sea. I was
too far to say hello and at this point I wasn't sure of myself. What am I doing
here? What was the point of all this?
And
then he said something that didn't put me at ease.”
Philip
Hoffman is an experimental filmmaker for whom the making of a film, the process
itself, is as important as the finished film. It is his way of keeping a diary.
" My films are a combination of everyone I meet,
what I learn, e.g. from other filmmakers. It all channels through me. I'm in a
way just a medium, but I might change it on the way, making it work." He
collects personal day-to-day experiences in the form of films, videotapes,
audio recordings and written diaries. "When I film I write about what I
film, and when I get the footage back, I write about that." Then he
examines and reworks his notes, diaries, audio, videotapes and films, analyzing
and editing them to create a more meaningful understanding of
past experiences and events.
"I
think you should not be self-conscious when you are working with a camera, you
should be in the rhythm of life. Only the editing process is analyzing."
Gradually
his films develop and certain patterns emerge. Only while editing does the
final structure of the film unfold, without a script written before shooting.
His film The Road Ended at the Beach
(1983) is an example of this kind of theory in practice. It developed during
seven years, begun when Hoffman was a student at
"I
had seen his photographs and films, but what did I know about
him as a human being?"
Mabou was a good place to stop.
"I
wanted to meet him face to face, and ask him about his own pictures and the
Beat poets. Because there has only been a few people besides Robert Frank and Jack
Kerouac whose work has moved me in that way.
There is something I could connect to my own world."
The Road Ended at the
Beach
starts with waiting for the trip. Hoffman's old friends and traveling
companions Jim and Richard are preparing for driving and painting their van.
"There
is a preoccupation in the film that it is going to be as good as Kerouac's
trip."
The
purpose of this last trip is to reunite old friendships and experiences again
the feeling of the earlier journeys. They meet an old Asian man, who has
traveled the world for ten years. They
meet an old cyclist, who has traveled around the world since 1953 and who is
now going around for the seventh time.
They drive and meet old friends, and try to experience again Jack
Kerouac's and Neil Cassidy's sizzling Mexican nights.
"But
when I got the footage back, the joy and excitement of traveling wasn't
there... There are two points to be made. One is that Kerouac's trip was
written as myth. And secondly, I did not go out to create a myth with my
camera. I tried to record something that is there... And the myth wasn't
there."
The
film turns into a discussion of the filmmaker's own mind and personal growth
and also the realization of myths and the need to break them.
"Kerouac's
work was not only a bohemian lifestyle. That is something the media has grabbed
on. The heart of it is when he was describing simple things... ‘Sympathy for
humanism' is how he described his work. And that is something I think Beat is. Sadness of life and joy of life both happening at the same
time."
" I see myself less as an observer. The camera is
something else for me... like someone playing jazz music... it puts me into
rhythm
with the rest of the world. It is my tool into the world."
And
life can be experienced better outside home or the place
which is called home.
"I
have discovered something about traveling. It's a perfect
container, an environment for the recording of life."
Most
of Hoffman's eight films are results of traveling. His newest one, passing through/torn formations (1987)
started when he visited his relatives in
His
films are subjective recordings of his own life, while weighing in against
myths and conventions.
?Oh,Zoo! (1986) is a puzzle-like study of reality and truth,
how they can be created in cinema and treated by cinematic
means. The framework for the film is the
documentation of the making of Peter Greenaway's A Zed and Two Noughts.
This connected again to Hoffman's own observations on life and his experiments,
which contribute to the underlying questioning of documentary evidence. What is
documentation, what is narrative storytelling and what is the difference
between them? It is up to the audience to decide.
"I
like people to participate in these films. I leave them open for
interpretation, because I don't like to feel authority and make big statements,
and secondly, I don't have the answers."
By
doing his films he questions conventional ways of filmmaking. "I think conventions are made, that
people try to mimic what has already been done. Conventions are sad and old...
I am interested in every person that has their own way of looking at the world.
By doing it your own way, you are unique... but not as a reaction to
conventional films. It just comes out of living and being and doing what you
want to do. I can't worry about anything else."
Robert
Frank appears in The Road Ended at the
Beach just in a couple of scenes, doing his own thing, nailing and looking
over the sea. As an everyday person.
"I
don't know, if I would go there again, but it was part
of playing out your youth. I guess I was looking for someone to give answers,
but of course, you have to do it alone. I think this resolves in the film, too.
And this film is not like On the Road.
It describes my trip, my personal end of the road and moving to something else.
The road ends at the beach. Then you have to do something else."