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・ Warren Silver
・ Warren Simpson
・ Warren Skaaren
・ Warren Skorodenski
・ Warren Smith
・ Warren Smith (American football)
・ Warren Smith (author)
・ Warren Smith (golfer)
・ Warren Smith (jazz percussionist)
・ Warren Smith (jazz trombonist)
・ Warren Smith (quarterback)
・ Warren Smith (singer)
・ Warren Snodgrass
・ Warren Snowdon
・ Warren Snyder
Warren Sonbert
・ Warren Sorby
・ Warren South, Pennsylvania
・ Warren Spahn
・ Warren Spahn Award
・ Warren Spannaus
・ Warren Spears
・ Warren Spector
・ Warren Spencer
・ Warren Spink
・ Warren Spragg
・ Warren Sprout
・ Warren St. John
・ Warren Stacey
・ Warren Staley


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Warren Sonbert : ウィキペディア英語版
Warren Sonbert

Warren Sonbert (June 26, 1947–May 31, 1995) was an acclaimed American experimental filmmaker whose work of nearly three decades began in New York in the mid-1960s. Known for the exuberant imagery of his films and especially for their intricate and innovative editing, he has been described as "the supreme Romantic diarist of the cinema"〔Dixon, Wheeler Winston. (''The Exploding Eye: A Re-Visionary History of 1960s American Experimental Cinema'' ). Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 1997, p. 159.Accessed March 28, 2014.〕 as well as "both a probing and playful artist and a keen intellect reveling in the interplay between all the creative arts."〔Gartenberg, Jon. ("Films: 'Amphetamine'" ). "Future for the Past: A Tribute to Warren Sonbert & the Estate Project." San Francisco International Film Festival, 1998. Accessed December 16, 2013.〕
==Early films==
A protégé of the avant-garde filmmaker Gregory J. Markopoulos but inspired by the work of Hollywood ''auteurs'' like Alfred Hitchcock and Douglas Sirk as well as by experimental cinema, Sonbert premiered his first, short films, to critical enthusiasm, in 1966 while a student at New York University. His first film, ''Amphetamine'', featured a shock cut to two young men passionately embracing as the camera swooped around them in the youthful cinephile's homage to the 360-degree kiss in Hitchcock's ''Vertigo''. The films that followed captured his friends at work and play, often in studios, galleries, or boutiques, and were frequently accompanied by rock songs of the recent period, whose energy added to the power of their rapid editing. In his second film, ''Where Did Our Love Go?'', Sonbert said in 1967, "I used mostly old rock 'n roll—the saddest and most nostalgic music there is."〔Sonbert, Warren. Letter to Gerard Malanga. ''Film Culture'', issue 45, 1967.〕
Roger Greenspun's review of a 1968 retrospective in New York began: "During the last weekend in January the Film Makers' Cinematheque offered a three-and-one-half-hour program consisting of the collected, but not quite complete, works of Warren Sonbert. The program's title, 'Introducing Warren Sonbert,' wasn't really accurate, because several of the films had been shown publicly before ... Sonbert now has a following, as the overflow crowds at the Cinematheque testify, and it seems more than likely that his films will be shown again. I think that anybody interested in the movies should see them, not because Sonbert is what's happening, but because he is so extraordinarily and consistently good. He is also highly enjoyable, fun to look at, apparently without a message but not without meaning."〔Greenspun, Roger. "Introducing Warren Sonbert," ''New York Free Press'', vol. I, no. 7, February 8, 1968.〕

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