The idea of a 'happening' is that there is little distance between the viewer and it, whatever 'it' is. It's an experience that's on-going and evolving.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
You see something, then it clicks with something else, and it will make a story. But you never know when it's going to happen.
I don't ever work in a way where something is an illustration of an event, but when something is occurring at the same time I see it as very informed by that.
The simplest and most psychologically satisfying explanation of any observed phenomenon is that it happened that way because someone wanted it to happen that way.
Everything that happens happens as it should, and if you observe carefully, you will find this to be so.
I believe, however, that such abnormal moments can be found in everyone, and it is all the more fortunate when they occur in individuals with creative talent or with clairvoyant powers.
We're very good at telling what happens and showing people while it happens... But sometimes television fails to take the time to say 'Why did it happen? What does it mean?' - To step back a little bit.
Within the process of filming, unexpected situations occur.
I always see that there's a - from a philosophical point of view - there's the appearance of things that everybody wants you to think is happening, then there's the reality underneath it.
Nothing can happen nowhere. The locale of the happening always colours the happening, and often, to a degree, shapes it.
What intrigues me is making images that confound and confuse the viewer but that the viewer knows, or suspects, really happened.
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