Rehearsals for Extinct Anatomies (1988) Poster

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8/10
Creepy
Eumenides_018 March 2009
Warning: Spoilers
This movie, a deviation from the Quay's usual dusty, badly-lit sets, is a game between black and white.

Lines come alive, stretch along walls, coil themselves back, and pervade all the walls of the set. Meanwhile, a disgusting one-eyed, puppet tugs at a bloated pimple on his forehead. Not much happens besides this, but somehow it transmits a bigger sense of dread and hopelessness than many pretentious horror movies.

Like all Quay movies, this one excels at technical craft. This is a great movie for whoever likes creepy stop-motion animation, or subtle nightmares, inventive juxtaposition of images.
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6/10
Extinct Rehearsal.
morrison-dylan-fan17 June 2014
Warning: Spoilers
Attempting to get back on track with my movie-viewing after having had a terrible week,I decided to start things off in a rather easy manner,by taking a look at an animated short film,made by the wonderful Quay brothers.

The plot:

As 2 pairs of hands start using pens to tap on puppets,the wick's from a row of small candles roll themselves out.Wrapping around a number of puppets,the wicks start to bring the puppets to life.

View on the film:

Rubbing against the floor with Lech Jankowski's harsh Avant-Garde score,writers/directors Stephen and Timothy Quay use expertly handled tracking shots to give the viewer a full '3D' view of their world,with the Quay following every dash that the wicks and puppets make.Sadly,despite showing a smooth eye in their directing style,the screenplay by the Quay runs out of steam at the half way point,which leads to the puppets getting their strings tied up in an extinct rehearsal.
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10/10
Based on an ingenious irony
D Kieckh21 April 1999
This gem is based on an ingenious irony: it is a puppet film, but what is the star? The one thing you are never supposed to see in puppet animation - Strings! There is a bouncing ball of string; the walls are lined with strings; the camera moves as if pulled by strings; and guess what instruments are on the soundtrack?
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9/10
Yeech!
Polaris_DiB11 October 2006
Warning: Spoilers
Don't watch this one if you're going to the doctor's anytime soon. The bright, white mise-en-scene (relatively brighter than most of the dust gray of most Quay brother features) has that clean, scrubbed look of a place you go for surgery. This is very different than the dust bunnies of Quay features, but on the other hand it makes their characters (made of string, wire, and rusted metal) seem that much more dirty and painful. It makes me think that watching this will give one tetanus.

I love the acknowledgements in the beginning. Offering this movie to evangelists seems a particularly harsh move on the Quays' part, but then again so much of this film is jagged-edged and rusted that maybe that direct approach fits it in an odd way.

--PolarisDiB
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9/10
The Dark Room
kurosawakira3 November 2013
I perceive this film to be a watershed in the brother's oeuvre. The early films, including "Street of Crocodiles (1986)", owe much to Svankmajer, and in some respects are still made in his shadow.

I have rarely been as visually stimulated as I was during this film and its 11 minutes. The amazing focus shifts and the movement of the camera have such a visual aura around them it's difficult to exactly decipher why they are so effective cinematically. The most astonishing sequence is the one with the two puppets in the dark room, the camera moving horizontally to the right revealing a brightly lit corridor with a great set of stairs, then back to the dark room again, then moving vertically, then moving in the depth, dimensionally, then back again, then to the right, revealing another beautiful brightly lit structure, a hallway of sorts. This film exhibits not only brilliant use of light, it's a groundbreaking use of space and as such stands as one of the greatest film moments I know of (I really have to make a list of these).

Zeitgeist and BFI have released it in Regions 1 and 2 respectively, and it's basically the same release. It has this film both in its original aspect ratio of 16:9 widescreen as well as in Scope (2.35:1).
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Very Skillfully, Intricately Crafted
Tornado_Sam18 April 2021
The above is something that one could say about pretty much every stop-motion film from the Brothers Quay, but it comes to life here even moreso than other works by them. "Rehearsals for Extinct Anatomies" has a unique atmosphere which is interestingly unique compared to the other Quay films: "The Comb" was quite dark, as was "Street of Crocodiles" and their "Stille Nacht" series. Here, the feel is entirely its own, which is built thanks to the Brothers' excellent attention to detail and their ability to craft an atmosphere because of this effort of intricacy. Some marvelous techniques are on display that come to life anew, and although containing no traces of narrative (some Quay films actually do have elements of a story within them) these things are enough to sustain the fourteen-minute film.

"Rehearsals for Extinct Anatomies" has a number of things occurring within it, including a grotesque puppet stroking over and over a wart on its forehead, a flickering ball bouncing up and down a set of stairs, and a puppet laying in a bed in a room while another puppet watches over it. While these things are of little substance on their own, two main techniques really serve to bring it to life in a unique and fresh way: the usage of manual focus in the camera lens, and the movement of the camera itself. When zooming in on particular details, the camera often uses the focus of the lens as an opportunity to reveal the different layers of the shot, so that indistinguisable objects that the viewer was hardly aware of before are given attention without changing the camera angle. Likewise, to keep the scene of the puppets in the room interesting, the camera creates a theme of panning up and down and side to side to reveal different aspects of the scene, which are partially blocked by objects in the foreground that obscure what is going on in the room. Both techniques give the viewer somewhat of an idea of the composition of the whole place, but leaves a lot up to the imagination, which is what makes it so interesting and unique. It is also very difficult to describe in writing, which is why to really understand what I'm saying, it is best to go watch the film itself before things really click into place.
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2/10
Really bad, even for Quay standards
Horst_In_Translation28 February 2016
Warning: Spoilers
First of all, the pretentious title "Rehearsals for Extinct Anatomies" is already vomit-inducing. This is a 14-minute short film by the Quay Twins from almost 30 years ago and as usual, it is animated and black-and-white for them. The only somewhat good thing here is the score, but the medium is film and not music, so I cannot give them really any credit for that either. I should have just listened to a record perhaps. In terms of the action we see, it's completely forgettable and obviously a failed attempt at trying to be artistic. I lost interest 2 minutes into the film. I may be a bit biased as I don't like what I have seen from the Quays so far, but this one really hits a new low I must say. Highly not recommended.
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