Philip Hoffman:
biographical notes by Peter Harcourt
While
a student at
If,
according to Mike Hoolboom, "the
Almost
without exception, Hoffman's work involves exorcism and espousal, from the
shuffling off of inadequate ideas concerning his sense of self in the early
films (On the Pond, 1978; The Road Ended at the Beach, 1983) to a
Buddhist-like reconciliation with the inevitability of loss and death that
characterizes his later works: Somewhere
Between Jalostotitlan & Encarnacion
(1984); ?O, Zoo! (The Making of a Fiction
Film) (1986); Kitchener-Berlin (1990)
and What these
ashes wanted (2001). Hoffman contests the claim to the truth characteristic
of conventional documentaries; ?O, Zoo! handles these themes with great playfulness, whereas both passing through/torn formations (1998)
and What these ashes wanted confront
them directly, without irony. passing through/torn
formations took Hoffman to
And
if death and dying is a presence in many of these works, it arrives
unexpectedly at the end of Destroying
Angel (1998), a film co-directed by Hoffman's friend Wayne Salazar that
celebrates Salazar’s homosexual marriage in spite of his ongoing struggle with
AIDS. Suddenly there is a phone call. A candle flickers out. Hoffman must hurry
home because of the imminent death of Marian McMahon, his companion of many
years who is ill with cancer. The full exploration of this relationship and its
sudden loss become the poignant affirmation of What these ashes wanted. Hoffman has stated that his desire was “to
illuminate the conditions of her death… the mystery of her life and the reason
why, at the instant of her passage, I felt peace with her leaving… a feeling I
no longer hold.” The catalogue for the Toronto Images Festival described the
film this way: "What these
ashes wanted is not a story of surviving death, but rather of living death
through a heightening of the quotidian moments of everyday experience."
The
complete works of Philip Hoffman incontestably establish him as an independent
filmmaker of intricate artistic achievement and philosophical depth.