NFR Project: “Motion Painting No. 1”
Created by Oskar Fischinger
Premiere: 1947
This is a difficult film to tackle, as no copy exists of it to watch and analyze – at least, not online.
Fischinger was a pioneering German animator, who began to create a series of color-filled abstract pictures synchronized to classical music excerpts. He was summoned to Hollywood in 1936, and continued to create his unique offerings . . . but eventually found little support for these activities. (He worked on Disney’s Fantasia [1940], but quit due to artistic differences.) Eventually, he turned to oil painting, giving up on filmmaking except for commercial projects.
Motion Painting No. 1 was his last great independent project. He created the film by applying oil paint to Plexiglass, carefully shooting frame by frame to create a breathtakingly beautiful concoction of swirling, darting images that pulsed with the musical soundtrack, here Bach’s Brandenburg Concerto No. 3. Fischinger’s obscure efforts would survive, and wound up influencing future generations of animators.
The NFR is one writer’s attempt to review all the films listed in the National Film Registry in chronological order. Next time: Out of the Past.


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