Migration
"Whereas SQUARE INCH FIELD was composed largely in the camera, Rimmer's next film, MIGRATION, made full use of rear-projection rephotography, stop-framing, and slow motion. The migration of the title is interpreted as the flight of a ghost bird through aeons of space/time, through the micro-macro universe, through a myriad of complex realities. A seagull is seen flying gracefully in slow motion against a grainy green sky; suddenly the frame stops, warps and burns, as though caught in the gate of the projector. Now begins an alternation of fast and slow sequences in which the bird flies through time-lapse clouds and fog and, in a stroboscopic crescendo, hurtles into the sun's corona. Successive movements of the film develop rhythmic, organic counterpoints in which cosmic transformations send jelly fish into the sky and ocean waves into the sun." - Gene Youngblood. Preserved by the Academy Film Archive in 2014.
Similar Movies

Primary
1960

I Be Done Been Was Is
1983
Boy and Crows
1968

Women in Defense
1941

Shoppers Market
1963

The Costume Designer
1950
America's Hidden Weapon
1944

Chicken Real
1970

Marjoe
1972

Hoop Dreams
1994

Harlan County U.S.A.
1977

Hearts and Minds
1974

Burden of Dreams
1982

The Wormwood Star
1956

The Art Director
1949

The Man Who Skied Down Everest
1975

Sikkim
1971

The Town
1944

God Respects Us When We Work, But Loves Us When We Dance
1968

The Sun's Gonna Shine
1969