Shoot Don't Shoot
William E. Jones
Experimental : 5' / Politics, Colorism, Violence

Adaptation of a law enforcement instructional film that trains officers to decide by instinct whether or not to fire their guns. The suspect in this sequence fits the following description: “a black man wearing a pinkish shirt and yellow pants”.

/ EXHIBITION

Lisboa
September 24 | 21h30 | Cinemateca Portuguesa - Sala M. Félix Ribeiro Buy Tickets
QL - Retrospective
https://www.davidkordanskygallery.com

/ Details

Year: 2012

Country: USA

Language: english

Subtitles: portuguese

/ Direction

William E. Jones

USA


For over three decades, William E. Jones (Canton, Ohio, USA, 1962) has been producing films, videos, photographs, and books that re-examine existing cultural materials. He has explored the decline of America’s industrial Midwest, the representation of gay men in sources as diverse as Eastern European pornography and police surveillance footage, the psychedelic visual potential of Cold War military footage, and poetic connections between the randomized nature of the Internet and ancient philosophy. Jones has been the subject of many solo exhibitions and retrospectives at internationally renowned institutions. He lives and works in Los Angeles.

 

© Paris Tavitian for LIFO Magazine


Filmography

Selected

 

2015 – Psychic Driving (Experimental Short)
2013 – Actual T.V. Picture (Experimental Short)
2012 – Shoot Don’t Shoot (Experimental Short)
1962-2007 – Tearoom (Experimental Feature)
2006 – Film Montages (for Peter Roehr) (Experimental Short)

2006 – V.O. (Experimental Feature)

2004 – Is It Really so Strange? (Documentary)
1998 – The Fall of Communism as Seen in Gay Pornography (Short Documentary)

1997 – Finished (Experimental Documentary)
1991 – Massillon (Documentary)

This site uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic. Your IP address and user-agent are shared with Google along with performance and security metrics to ensure quality of service, generate usage statistics, and to detect and address abuse.