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Thom Andersen
Thom Andersen
from Wikipedia
Thom Andersen, May 2009

Thom Andersen (born 1943, Chicago) is an American filmmaker, film critic, and teacher best known for his works of experimental film, including his 1975 film Eadweard Muybridge, Zoopraxographer and the 2003 essay film Los Angeles Plays Itself.[1][2][3][4]

Biography

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Andersen went to high school in Los Angeles, where one of his classmates was future colleague, Michael Asher. Andersen attended the University of California, Berkeley in the early 1960s and then returned to his hometown of Los Angeles to attend USC School of Cinematic Arts, where he studied with Arthur Knight and eventually assisted on Knight's project The History of Sex in Cinema. While at USC, Andersen met long-time friend and collaborator Morgan Fisher, who assisted on Andersen's student film Melting, a portrait of a sundae. He regularly attended local screening series including shows by the Trak Film Group and Movies Round Midnight and famously wrote about an unpopular screening of Andy Warhol's Sleep.[5] After USC, Andersen attended UCLA and completed his experimental documentaries Olivia's Place and Eadweard Muybridge, Zoopraxographer. During the 1970s, his films screened at Los Angeles' Theatre Vanguard and Berkeley's Pacific Film Archive. He was the programmer for LA Filmforum in Los Angeles during the late 1990s.[citation needed]

Andersen's film Los Angeles Plays Itself won the National Film Board Award for Best Documentary at the 2003 Vancouver International Film Festival, was voted best documentary of 2004 by the Village Voice critic's poll,[6] and was voted one of the "Top Ten Films of the Decade" by critics at Cinema Scope.[7] In 2010 he completed Get Out of the Car, a portrait of signs and abandoned spaces set to Los Angeles music. In spring 2012, Andersen took part in the three-month Whitney Biennial.[8]

Career

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He has taught at the SUNY Buffalo and Ohio State University and had taught film theory and history at the California Institute of the Arts from 1987 until 2021.[9] He lives in a two-bedroom modernist house designed by the architect Rudolf Schindler.[10]

Andersen coined the term film gris, a type of film noir which categorizes a unique series of films that were released between 1947 and 1951.[11]

Preservation

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The Academy Film Archive has preserved a number of Thom Andersen's films, including Olivia's Place, Melting, and --- ------- (aka The Rock n Roll Movie).[12]

Filmography

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See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Thom Andersen is an American experimental filmmaker, critic, and educator known for his influential essay films that critically examine Hollywood's ideological frameworks, representations of Los Angeles, and the broader history of cinema, most notably through his landmark work Los Angeles Plays Itself (2003). His films frequently repurpose archival footage and found materials to uncover suppressed histories and challenge conventional narratives in popular film. This approach has established him as a key figure in contemporary essayistic and experimental filmmaking. Born in Chicago in 1943 and raised in Los Angeles from the age of three, Andersen pursued film studies at the University of Southern California in the 1960s and later at the University of California, Los Angeles, where he completed his thesis film Eadweard Muybridge, Zoopraxographer (1975). His early work emerged from the experimental film scene of the era, and he has remained deeply engaged with Los Angeles as both a subject and a creative base throughout his career. Since 1987, Andersen has served as a lecturer in film at the California Institute of the Arts, where he has influenced generations of filmmakers and scholars. He has also contributed extensively as a writer and critic, publishing articles in outlets such as Film Comment, Artforum, Sight & Sound, and Cinema Scope since 1966, and releasing his first collection of essays, Slow Writing: Thom Andersen on Cinema, in 2017. Additionally, he has curated film programs and seasons, including events at the Viennale and work with L.A. Filmforum in the 1990s. His filmography includes early shorts like Melting (1965), collaborations such as Red Hollywood (1995, co-directed with Noël Burch), and later works including Get Out of the Car (2010), Reconversão (2012), and The Thoughts That Once We Had (2015), which reflect his ongoing interest in cinematic philosophy, urban change, and personal histories of film. Through these projects, Andersen has consistently bridged scholarly inquiry and artistic practice to interrogate the cultural role of moving images.

Early life and education

Childhood and relocation

Thom Andersen was born in 1943 in Chicago, Illinois. His family relocated to southern California at the age of three, settling in Los Angeles. This early move established his lifelong residence and deep association with the city, which he has described as home for most of his life. The relocation exposed him to the landscape and culture of Los Angeles from a young age, profoundly influencing his perspective on the metropolis. He attended high school in Los Angeles.

Academic training

Thom Andersen attended the University of California, Berkeley in the early 1960s before returning to Los Angeles to study at the USC School of Cinematic Arts. At USC, he studied under film critic and historian Arthur Knight. He later enrolled at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), where he focused on experimental documentary filmmaking and completed a master's degree. His academic training across these institutions provided a foundation in film history, theory, and production during the 1960s and early 1970s.

Filmmaking career

Early experimental films

Thom Andersen initiated his filmmaking career with experimental shorts in the mid-1960s while developing his interest in film form and visual perception. His debut film, Melting (1965), is a student project that forms a portrait of a sundae in the process of melting, with assistance from Morgan Fisher. He followed this with Olivia’s Place (1966/74), an experimental documentary that extended his engagement with observational and structural techniques. Between 1966 and 1967, Andersen co-created --- ------- aka The Rock n Roll Movie with Malcolm Brodwick, further exploring experimental modes of expression. These three early shorts, Melting, Olivia’s Place, and --- ------- aka The Rock n Roll Movie, have been preserved by the Academy Film Archive. Andersen's most substantial early achievement came with Eadweard Muybridge, Zoopraxographer (1975), an experimental documentary where he served as producer, writer, director, and animation photographer. The film investigates the life and innovations of photographer Eadweard Muybridge, particularly his motion studies and the zoopraxiscope, using animated recreations of Muybridge's sequential photographs to illustrate his contributions to the prehistory of cinema. These early works occasionally screened at venues like Theatre Vanguard during the 1970s, providing initial exposure within the experimental film community.

Major essay films

Thom Andersen gained prominence for his feature-length essay films that interrogate the intersections of film history, politics, and urban representation in cinema. Red Hollywood (1996), co-directed and co-written with Noël Burch, examines the contributions of leftist filmmakers in Hollywood before the blacklist and the subsequent suppression of progressive influences during the McCarthy era. His most acclaimed work, Los Angeles Plays Itself (2003), which Andersen directed, wrote, produced, and narrated, is a comprehensive essay on how motion pictures have depicted Los Angeles, critiquing stereotypes and ideological constructions through montage of film clips and his own voiceover text. The film received significant recognition, winning Best Documentary at the Vancouver International Film Festival in 2003 and Best Documentary in the Village Voice Film Critics Poll in 2004. These works mark Andersen's most influential contributions to the essay film genre, focusing on archival footage and critical commentary to reveal hidden histories within Hollywood cinema and city imagery.

Later works

In his later career, Thom Andersen has produced a series of concise yet conceptually rich short films and one major essay feature that extend his interest in the intersections of cinema, urban space, philosophy, and overlooked cultural histories. Get Out of the Car (2010) is a short documentary that assembles images of Los Angeles billboards, neon signs, and vernacular architecture alongside fragments of the city's music culture, functioning as a lyrical companion piece to the themes of urban representation in Los Angeles Plays Itself. Reconversão (2012) shifts focus to Portuguese architect Eduardo Souto de Moura, combining footage of his buildings with voiceover reflections on architecture's material and temporal dimensions to explore how built environments persist and change. The Tony Longo Trilogy (2014) is a short work that compiles three vignettes centered on actor Tony Longo, using his screen presence to meditate on performance and typecasting in Hollywood. In 2015, Andersen completed two distinct projects: The Thoughts That Once We Had, a feature-length essay film structured around Gilles Deleuze’s Cinema 1 and Cinema 2, in which Andersen assembles clips and commentary to trace how cinematic images produce thought. The same year saw Juke: Passages from the Films of Spencer Williams, a short that re-edits and recontextualizes footage from the African American director Spencer Williams' race films to highlight rhythmic and narrative patterns in early Black cinema. Andersen's work continued with A Train Arrives at the Station (2016), a brief short that he directed, revisiting the Lumière brothers' iconic arrival motif through new footage and formal restraint.

Teaching career

California Institute of the Arts

Thom Andersen began teaching at the California Institute of the Arts in 1987, where he taught film composition in the School of Film/Video. He also served as associate dean in the School of Film/Video and as founding director of the Program in Film and Video. His long-term role at CalArts encompassed instruction in film-related subjects, serving as a key part of his professional career alongside his filmmaking and critical writing. The position allowed him to engage with emerging filmmakers, contributing to the school's reputation for producing innovative experimental film and video artists over recent decades. Andersen's teaching at CalArts coincided with the development and release of his major essay films, including Los Angeles Plays Itself and The Thoughts That Once We Had, integrating his academic work with his creative explorations of film history, ideology, and representation. He retired in 2021, and in recognition of his extensive service, the CalArts Board of Trustees conferred Faculty Emeritus status upon him in 2022. This emeritus status reflects his enduring impact on the institution's film education program.

Other teaching positions

Prior to his long-term position at the California Institute of the Arts, Thom Andersen held teaching positions at the State University of New York at Buffalo and Ohio State University. He joined the faculty of the Center for Media Studies at the University at Buffalo in 1976, at the invitation of documentarian James Blue. In 1978, he took a position in the Department of Photography and Cinema at Ohio State University, where he became a colleague of artist Allan Sekula. Details on these earlier roles remain limited in available sources, with no extensive accounts of his specific contributions or duration beyond the initial appointments.

Critical contributions

Writings and concepts

Thom Andersen has made notable contributions to film criticism through his scholarly writings, which frequently examine the political dimensions of cinema, particularly in Hollywood during the mid-20th century. He co-authored the book Les Communistes de Hollywood: Autre chose que des martyrs (1994) with Noël Burch, published by Presses Sorbonne Nouvelle, which analyzes the Hollywood Blacklist era and argues against the prevailing narrative that portrayed blacklisted filmmakers solely as innocent martyrs, instead emphasizing their active leftist engagements and the ideological content of their work. Andersen coined the term "film gris" to designate a specific subset of film noir produced between 1947 and 1951, characterized by its leftist orientation and incorporation of social criticism directed at American capitalism, class relations, racism, and sexism. This concept reframes certain social problem films from the period as deliberate expressions of political dissent by blacklisted or HUAC-targeted writers and directors, rather than mere generic variations of noir. As an occasional critic and writer on film history, Andersen has produced essays over several decades that address avant-garde cinema, Hollywood features, and contemporary works, often situating them within broader contexts of politics, popular culture, and urban landscapes such as Los Angeles. Many of these writings were later collected in Slow Writing: Thom Andersen on Cinema (2017), edited by Mark Webber and published by The Visible Press, which showcases his measured, socially conscious approach to criticism. These critical ideas, including the "film gris" framework, informed his related compilation work Red Hollywood, which draws on clips and analysis to highlight leftist elements in blacklist-era films.

Curation and collaborations

Thom Andersen has contributed to film culture through his work as a programmer and curator, particularly during his tenure at LA Filmforum in Los Angeles in the 1990s. His programming efforts helped present important seasons and retrospectives focused on experimental, historical, and politically engaged cinema. Andersen's notable collaborations include long-term projects with French film theorist Noël Burch, stemming from shared research into the Hollywood blacklist. Together they co-directed the video essay Red Hollywood (1996), which examines the films of blacklisted writers, directors, and producers through excerpts from over fifty features and interviews with figures such as Abraham Polonsky, Paul Jarrico, and Alfred Lewis Levitt. The work highlights the political commitments and aesthetic contributions of these filmmakers, arguing for the significance of leftist perspectives within popular American cinema. This video formed part of a larger research endeavor that also resulted in their co-authored book Les communistes de Hollywood: Autre chose que martyrs, which has not been translated into English. Andersen also appeared as an American character in Jean-Marie Straub and Danièle Huillet's Klassenverhältnisse (Class Relations, 1984).

Personal life

Residence and family

Thom Andersen has been a resident of Los Angeles for most of his life. He lives in a modestly modernist two-story house in the hills of Los Feliz that was renovated in the 1930s by architect R. M. Schindler, offering sweeping and varied vistas of the city. Andersen was married to Christine Chang from 2004 until her death on July 21, 2024. She was his beloved wife of 20 years, and they met in Los Angeles. No further details about other family members are publicly documented.

Recognition

Awards and honors

Thom Andersen's contributions to experimental and documentary cinema have been recognized through various awards and honors. His 1974 film Eadweard Muybridge, Zoopraxographer was inducted into the National Film Registry by the Library of Congress in 2015, acknowledging its cultural, historical, and aesthetic significance in American film heritage. His 2003 documentary Los Angeles Plays Itself won the National Film Board of Canada Award for Best Documentary Feature at the Vancouver International Film Festival in 2003. The film was voted best documentary of 2004 in the Village Voice critics' poll. It was also included in Cinema Scope magazine's list of the Top Ten Films of the Decade. In 2012, Andersen participated in the Whitney Biennial at the Whitney Museum of American Art, highlighting his standing within contemporary art and experimental film circles.

Preservation and legacy

The Academy Film Archive has preserved several of Thom Andersen's early short experimental films, including Melting (1965), Olivia's Place (1966/74), and -- ------ (1966–67). These restorations have enabled screenings of pristine prints in retrospectives, highlighting Andersen's foundational work in structural and experimental cinema. The UCLA Film & Television Archive has also participated in restoration efforts for his films, contributing to their long-term accessibility. Andersen's legacy endures as a leading figure in the essay film genre, where his erudite, politically engaged, and formally innovative approach has shaped discourse among cinephiles and filmmakers. Works such as Los Angeles Plays Itself have exerted monumental influence, transforming how critics and artists think about film representation and urban space. His emphasis on cinema's self-reflexive potential continues to inform contemporary experimental and documentary practices.

References

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