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Films Of Charles And Ray Eames #1

Films Of Charles And Ray Eames #1

Image (1989)
DVD
NR (Not Rated)
014381921021
Documentary
USA | English | Color | 00:09

Powers of Ten is one of the Eameses’ best-known films. Since it was produced in 1977, it has been seen by millions of people both nationally and internationally. As with A Communication Primer and 2n (a 2-minute Peep Show from the exhibition, Mathematica), in this film, Charles and Ray employed the system of exponential powers to visualize the importance of scale.

When the Eameses came across the 1957 book by Kees Boeke, Cosmic View: The Universe in Forty Jumps, they decided to use it as the basis of a film investigating the relative size of things and the significance of adding a zero to any number.

Powers of Ten illustrates the universe as an arena of both continuity and change, of everyday picnics and cosmic mystery. It begins with a close-up shot of a man sleeping near the lakeside in Chicago, viewed from one meter away. The landscape steadily moves out until it reveals the edge of the known universe. Then, at a rate of 10-to-the-tenth meters per second, the film takes us towards Earth again, continuing back to the sleeping man’s hand and eventually down to the level of a carbon atom.

In 1998, Powers of Ten was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant.”

Also Known As (AKA)
Brazil Potências de Dez
Soviet Union (Russian title) Десятые степени
USA (complete title) Powers of Ten: A Film Dealing with the Relative Size of Things in the Universe and the Effect of Adding Another Zero


Cast

Gregory Peck Narrator
Charles Eames Himself
Ray Eames Herself

Crew View all

Director Charles Eames

Edition details

Edition Vol. 1
Packaging Keep Case
Nr Discs 1
Screen Ratios Fullscreen (4:3)
Audio Tracks Dolby Digital Mono [English]
Mono [English]
Commentary [English]
Subtitles English
Layers Single side, Single layer
Edition Release Date Aug 15, 2000
Regions Region 1

Personal

Index 1729
Added Date Nov 21, 2020 19:27:52
Modified Date Nov 21, 2020 19:27:53