88:88
December 1, 2015 · The Pilot Light · 7:30 p.m.
The first feature by Canadian experimental filmmaker Isiah Medina is an explosive digital diary dealing with ideas about time, love, philosophy, poverty, and poetry, all erupting within a densely layered montage that is as formally rigorous as it is emotionally raw. The film’s title derives from the reset digital clock display that appears when power is restored to dwellings where it had been abruptly severed because of overdue electricity bills — a meaningless signature that Medina here resuscitates as a double-edged symbol that indicates how those who live in poverty also live in a state of suspended time.
A convulsive video collage of fragmented footage — of notes, sketches, reality, and re-enactments — shot on various formats (including the RED camera, mobile phones and 16mm), 88:88 depicts Medina and his friends trying to make sense of life’s chaos and confusion in down-and-out Winnipeg. Equating a sudden power outage with a rapid editing cut, the film progresses by way of a mathematical pattern of construction/deconstruction/repetition, creating a poetic, disjunctive tempo that ambitiously mixes late Godard, hip-hop freestyling, and Greek and French philosophy. Converting the flashing 88:88 clock into an equation of love and infinity, Medina’s film seeks to explore alternate ways of being in the world, resulting in one of the most unique representations of class and race in Canadian filmmaking and sounding the arrival of a fresh new voice. — Andrea Picard, programmer of TIFF’s Wavelengths program
“To watch the film is to experience a milieu, an abstract plunge into Winnipeg’s young underclass. . . . Medina’s figures (friends, one would assume) are actively coping and working towards understanding, just as the film aims to do.” — Adam Cook, Sight and Sound
“88:88 is a young film about youth. Medina is aware of the traditions he’s engaging (Godard, Trecartin, and Raya Martin come to mind), but like so many other places his film fitfully stops, these figures are merely momentary flashpoints, orbiting the others with no impulse toward hierarchy. This is unbridled filmmaking, resoundingly alive.” — Michael Sicinski, MUBI’s Notebook
About the Filmmaker
Isiah Median grew up in Winnipeg and lives in Toronto. He studied at Concordia University. He made his directorial debut with the short Semi-Auto Colours (10), followed by Time is the Sun (13). 88:88 (15) is his first feature.