Anti-Clock
{{short description|1979 film}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2025}}
{{Use British English|date=June 2016}}
{{more citations needed|date=July 2018}}
{{Infobox film
| name = Anti-Clock
| image = File:Anti-Clock_film_poster.png
| caption = DVD cover
| director = Jane Arden
Jack Bond
| producer = Jack Bond
| writer = Jane Arden
| starring = Sebastian Saville
| music = Mihai Dragutescu
| cinematography = Jane Arden
Jack Bond
Mike Biddle
Rupert Parker
Gordon McKerrow
Dominic Holiday
| editing = Jack Bond
| studio = Kendon Films
Jack Bond Films
Boyd/Co
| distributor =
| released = {{Film date|1979|11}}
| runtime = 96 minutes
| country = United Kingdom
| language = English
| budget =
}}
Anti-Clock (also known as Anti-clock: a Time Stop in the Life of Joseph Sapha) is a 1979 British experimental psychological science-fiction drama film directed by Jane Arden and Jack Bond.{{Cite web |title=Anti-Clock |url=https://collections-search.bfi.org.uk/web/Details/ChoiceFilmWorks/150013265 |access-date=15 March 2025 |website=British Film Institute Collections Search}}{{Cite web |last=Parkinson |first=David |date=21 January 2021 |title=10 great last films by British directors |url=https://www.bfi.org.uk/lists/10-great-last-films-british-directors |access-date=15 March 2025 |website=British Film Institute}} It was written by Arden and produced by Bond. The film, which stars Arden's son Sebastian Saville, was shot on film and video in colour with black and white sequences.{{Cite web |last=Zagha |first=Muriel |date=10 July 2009 |title=The Anti-Clock frozen for 30 years |url=https://www.theguardian.com/film/2009/jul/10/anti-clock-rerelease |access-date=15 March 2025 |website=The Guardian}}
Plot
The film mixes pioneering video techniques with pin-sharp colour footage in order to create a densely woven, dream-like narrative which explores issues of personal identity and social conformity. The story takes Joseph Sapha though the shadows of his past to confront that mirror image of the self.
Cast
- Sebastian Saville as Professor J.D. Zanov/Joseph Sapha
- Suzan Cameron as Alanda Clark
- Tom Gerrard as The Dealer
- Liz Saville as Sapha's sister
- Madame Luisa Aranowicz as parapsychologist
- Marguerita Gagarin as parapsychologist
- Yoshiro Matsuya as parapsychologist
- Katherine Newell as parapsychologist
- Gia-Fu Feng as Tai chi master
- Don Wilde as Alpha therapist
- Richard Feynman as The Physicist
- Brian Jones
- Jasper Gough
- Robert Armstrong
- Joe Chappell
- Molly Tweedlie
- Derek Osborne
- Tony C.T. Tang
- Chan Fai
- William K. Lam
- Pat Bond
- Kenneth Pearson
- Louise Temple (uncredited)
Production
=Filming locations=
The film was shot on location in London and Norfolk, England (per film credits).
=Music=
Arden sings the songs "Sleepwalking" and "Figures in White", for which she also wrote the lyrics.
Release
The film opened the 1979 London Film Festival but was never picked up for British distribution: its only other public British screening was at the National Film Theatre in 1983 as a tribute to Jane Arden, who committed suicide at the end of the previous year.{{Citation needed|date=March 2025}} The film remained unseen since then. However, it had a modest theatrical release in the US, where it received considerable critical acclaim.{{Citation needed|date=March 2025}}
After Arden's suicide in 1982, Bond withdrew the film from circulation.
Reception
Variety wrote: "As with many faddists and hoaxers, the filmmakers take scientific principles and draw absurd conclusions from them out of context. In Anti-Clock, the theories of physics formulated by Heisenberg and Einstein to explain the properties of subatomic particles are fatuously applied to issues of human behavior. This gives Arden and Bond license to rail out against sexism and materialism, but their 'we are all one' philosophy is strained. Despite contributions by some talented cameramen, film is a technical shambles."{{Cite journal |date=17 September 1980 |title=Anti-Clock |volume=300 |issue=7 |pages=18 |id={{ProQuest|1505879284}} |magazine=Variety}}
Sight and Sound Claire Monk wrote that the film: "merits a place in moving-image history as a conceptually ingenious experiment in making a 'video movie' at a time when this was a genuinely new and cumbersome technology."{{Cite journal |last=Monk |first=Claire |date=August 2009 |title=Rushes: Revival: Long Live the Ghosts |journal= |volume=19 |issue=8 |pages=12 |id={{ProQuest|1840903}} |magazine=Sight and Sound}}
For The Quietus, Anthony Nield wrote: "The tone is reminiscent of early Cronenberg (particularly the black and white miniatures of Stereo and Crimes Of The Future) and JG Ballard: bleak, clinical, of its time and out of time. The seventies are there in the background, but they barely impinge on proceedings."{{Cite web |last=Neild |first=Anthony |date=20 August 2012 |title=Filmmaking As Therapy: The Singular Vision Of Jane Arden |url=https://thequietus.com/culture/film/jane-arden-jack-bond-separation-other-side-of-underneath-anti-clock-bfi-dvd/ |access-date=15 March 2025 |website=The Quietus}}
Home media
The film was restored by the British Film Institute for DVD and Blu-ray and released on 13 July 2009.
References
{{Reflist}}