The First Movie on the Internet: Volume D
The fourth volume in a cycle of features that wrap around The Telepathic Motion Picture of the Lost Tribes. Announced in a recent email.
David Blair
Also Directed by David Blair
Computer programmer/beekeeper Jacob gets a "television" implanted in his brain by a race of telekinetic bees, which causes him to experience severe hallucinations. (Includes: Mesopotamian bees, souls living inside weapons, the land of the dead in the Moon, Cain, the Trinity site, the tower of Babel, and a planet TV transmitting the dead of the future inside the Garden of Eden Cave which are giant bees, a Supranormal Film Society trying to capture the dead on film in the 1920's, the letter X, missiles turning into flying saucers, a beekeeper who is murdered by his own bees, and the cities of the dead)
An expansive research project that takes us in a flashback to the reconstruction of a lost film production in Manchuria, the doomed epic entitled The Lost Tribes. (M HKA)
Collaborative film made in Denmark.
The third volume in a cycle of features that wrap around The Telepathic Motion Picture of the Lost Tribes. Announced in a recent email.
The first volume in a cycle of features that wrap around The Telepathic Motion Picture of the Lost Tribes. Announced in a recent email.
“Volumes E + F of “The First Movie On The Internet” are now a thing,” says director David Blair in a Patreon announcement. “They are both very long, but then so is Jeopardy, or its’ precursor, the CBS Television Quiz of 1941” – Volume F is reported to have a tentative length of 24 hours!
A videotape about places neither here nor there, neither there nor here.
The second volume in a cycle of features that wrap around The Telepathic Motion Picture of the Lost Tribes. Announced in a recent email.
"Volumes E + F of "The First Movie On The Internet" are now a thing," says director David Blair in a Patreon announcement. "They are both very long, but then so is Jeopardy, or its' precursor, the CBS Television Quiz of 1941" - Volume E is reported to have a tentative length of 30 hours!
"Between 1995 and 1997, I lived in Tokyo, where I began to work on a movie about Manchuria. [...] Volume G is the beginning of that movie from then, set in a place that the Communist Chinese called Fake [or Maquette] Manchuria at one time. [...] When I was younger, I had the habit of reading very long novels, liking those in a list like Murasaki or Wu or Pynchon or Herodotus or Fuentes or Blish or Sterne or Murakami, and this movie reminds me of that..." - (David Blair)