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<-- back Among cinephiles, the 2006 World Cup Final was probably one of the most highly anticipated events in the history of football -- given that André Heller, cultural coordinator of the 2006 World Cup, had been touting for years he'd hire Jean-Luc Godard to direct a live TV broadcast. That didn't happen, but luckily, Roger Buergel, artistic director of Documenta 12, invited Harun Farocki to present the match as a 24-channel video installation. This could have failed just as easily (Farocki's production journal (1) lists countless financial and technical obstacles, most of which appear structural or systemic rather than just accidental), but in the end, even though both the budget and the number of video channels had to be halved, the work actually materialized. Sadly, those who saw it in Kassel in 2007 most likely never saw it again. "Deep Play" serves as a reminder how sports television -- usually a confused mishmash of replay, close-up, slow motion and ornamental CGI -- makes even the most exciting football match look boring, and how exciting even the most boring match could become if anyone had the slightest idea about composition, montage or duration. Farocki's approach is simple, but effective: he constructs a panoramic view of football as big data, a parallel arrangement of statistics, heat maps, tactical overlays, movement tracking, computer simulations and surveillance footage. Thankfully, the one aspect of sports television that normally renders it unwatchable -- the most incompetent commentary track allowed in any type of professional mass media -- is entirely absent, and we can only hear the voice of the official broadcast's technical coordinator, a variety of ambient sounds, some computer voices, and occasional police chatter. The match itself turned out to be rather forgettable: not the most boring World Cup Final in history, but with a stretch of 100 goalless minutes, it's a close contender. If it will always be remembered, then for its famous anticlimax in minute 110: Zinedine Zidane's iconic headbutt against Marco Materazzi. For certain cinephiles, Zidane's dismissal must have come as a bizarre déjà-vu: The only other truly groundbreaking football artwork of the 21st century, Douglas Gordon's and Philippe Parreno's film about Zidane's performance in the 2005 Spanish league match between Real Madrid and Villareal (2), happens to end with the exact same scene. Which is a remarkable coincidence, and even though it reveals nothing about Zidane, it illustrates one of the most fundamental tensions in contemporary football: a board game with human pieces that is about to be "solved" by computer-aided analytics, but whose history will always be remembered and celebrated as an ongoing series of absurd statistical anomalies. (1) http://newfilmkritik.de/archiv/2007-12/auf-zwolf-flachen-schirmen/ (2) https://piratecinema.org/screenings/20061217 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- sunday july 30 9 pm deep play harun farocki, 2007 120 minutes + penalties pirate cinema berlin u kottbusser tor e-mail for directions -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- () >< pirate cinema berlin www.piratecinema.org <-- back |