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Emily Drummer

Directing

Biography

Emily Drummer (b. 1990, San Francisco, California) is a filmmaker who uses immersive research as a starting point to investigate the dynamic between technology and the natural world. She completed her MFA in Film and Video Production at the University of Iowa where she was awarded a 2017 Princess Grace honoria to support her thesis film. Drummer’s work has been exhibited internationally at venues including Edinburgh International Film Festival, Ji.hlava International Documentary Film Festival, Aesthetica Short Film Festival, and Pleasure Dome in Toronto, ON.

Known For

Field Resistance
N/A

Charging scenes of the present with dystopian speculation, "Field Resistance" blurs the boundaries between documentary filmmaking and science fiction to investigate overlooked environmental devastation in the overlooked state of Iowa. Footage collected from disparate locations—a university herbarium, karst sinkholes inhabited by primordial flora and fauna, a telecommunication tower job site, a decaying grain silo, among others—interlocks to evoke a narrative of present danger and future disaster, of plant expansion and humanity's retreat. The film rejects the human individual as the focus of narrative cinema, and, instead, adopts the perspective of a symbiotic "implosive whole" in which human and nonhumans are related in an overlapping, non-total way.

Field Resistance

2019
Behind the Torchlight
N/A

Behind the Torchlight creates a transhistorical space - a place neither here nor there - that reflects the missing history of "the usherette" in early American cinemas. Constructed using found and original footage shot at an abandoned movie theater in Brooklyn, NY, the film abstracts historical temporality. At once on display and concealed by the partial darkness of the theater interior, usherettes served as objects of fantasy for moviegoers and were themselves spectators.

Behind the Torchlight

2015
Histories of Simulated Intimacy
N/A

Histories of Simulated Intimacy is a sensory essay film that investigates the gaps in time and space produced by the technological mediation of human love and desire. Roving, dismembered voices – messages left for the filmmaker by former lovers, found voice messages made on gramophone discs – hunt for image-bodies, creating a simultaneous presence and absence: a woman carried gently by the flow of a Lazy River; the undulations of a darkened, glimmering dance party; memories and traces of the once-massive Iowan prairies. The film explores polarities such as public and private, nature and culture, near and far, bios and techne, producing a space in which technologies of intimacy, separated by historical measurements of time, can coalesce in perpetuity.

Histories of Simulated Intimacy

2017