Traceroute (film)
Traceroute | |
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Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Johannes Grenzfurthner |
Produced by | Johannes Grenzfurthner, Andreas Reisenbauer, Heather Kelley, Guenther Friesinger |
Written by | Johannes Grenzfurthner |
Narrated by | Johannes Grenzfurthner |
Cinematography | Eddie Codel |
Production company |
monochrom, Reisenbauer Film |
Distributed by | monochrom, Reisenbauer Film |
Release dates |
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Running time | 120 minutes |
Country | Austria, United States |
Language | English, German |
Traceroute is a 2016 Austrian/American documentary film directed by Johannes Grenzfurthner. The autobiographical documentary and road movie deals with the history, politics and impact of nerd culture. Grenzfurthner calls his film a "personal journey into the uncharted depths of nerd culture, a realm full of dangers, creatures and more or less precarious working conditions",[1] an attempt to "chase the ghosts of nerddom's past, present and future."[2] The film was co-produced by art group monochrom and Reisenbauer Film. It features music by Kasson Crooker, Hans Nieswandt, and many others.
Concept
Artist and self-declared nerd Johannes Grenzfurthner is documenting his personal road trip from the West Coast to the East Coast of the USA, to introduce the audience to places and people that shaped and inspired his art and politics. Traceroute is a reflection on Grenzfurthner's own roots of nerddom, and "On the Road style romp across the United States as he visits icons of the counterculture, the outré, and the generally questionable."[3] Grenzfurthner summarizes the concept in an interview for Boing Boing: "It is a film on biographies and obsessions and spaces of possibility – in other words something between loving embrace and merciless vivisection. Maintaining a critical meta-outlook was just as important to me as abandoning myself to unfathomable stammerings of adoration. And that all works for one simple reason: because I take a step forward, introducing myself and confessing my guilt like in Alcoholics Anonymous, only to then take off and visit the best whiskey distilleries. In my case these destinations are not whiskey makers, but people and places and symbols of a very special pop culture."[4]
The film incorporates art and illustrations by James Brothwell, Bonni Rambatan, Michael Marrak, Karin Frank, Ben Lawson, Michael Zeltner, Josh Ellingson and eSeL in a cinematic collage that draws inspiration from 1990s fanzine and punk aesthetics, BBS culture, ANSI art and fantastic art.[5]
Cast
Traceroute features interviews with Matt Winston, Sandy Stone, Bruce Sterling, Jason Scott, Christina Agapakis, Trevor Paglen, Ryan Finnigan, Kit Stubbs, V. Vale, Sean Bonner, Allison Cameron, Josh Ellingson, Maggie Mayhem, Paolo Pedercini, Steve Tolin, Dan Wilcox, Jon Lebkowsky, Jan "Varka" Mulders, Adam Flynn, Abie Hadjitarkhani, Kelly Poots.
Metronaut writes: "Traceroute offers deep insights into the world of nerddom. A woman who creates cheese from bacteria on sweaty feet. A man who wants to construct a giant network of independent Geiger counters. Or a sex worker who identifies as a nerd. The multitude of topics and people shows how being a nerd is not restricted to programming and computers."[6]
Production
Writing
Grenzfurthner performed a stand-up show called Schicksalsjahre eines Nerds at Vienna's Rabenhof Theater in 2014. Parts of this show form the basis of Traceroute.[7] The basic script, although many scenes and interviews were improvised, was written by Johannes Grenzfurthner. The film's main language is English, but features archival footage in German.
Filming
Principal photography commenced on March 5, 2015 and ended March 27, 2015.[8] The film can be considered microfilmmaking and guerrilla filmmaking.
Sound design
Daniel Hasibar and Christian Staudacher created the sound design and audioscape underlying Grenzfurthner's narration.
Music
The film features music by Peter Barnett, Kasson Crooker, Damien Di Fede, Matthew Huffaker, Brady Leo, Vera Lynn, Kevin MacLeod, Hans Nieswandt, Roger Sandega, Eric Skiff.
Distribution
The film's World Premiere took place at NYC Independent Film Festival on April 28, 2016.[9] The European Premiere will be at DOK.fest Munich (Internationales Dokumentarfilmfestival München) on May 13, 2016.[10] Various film festivals and conventions (like Hackers on Planet Earth 2016, the European Media Arts Festival in Osnabrück or Print Screen Festival in Tel Aviv) have already confirmed screenings.[11] A limited theatrical release is planned in Austria and the USA in autumn 2016.
Reception
Critical response
Mental Floss' Chris Higgins writes about Traceroute: "As many nerds have noticed, there's a glut of nerd-positive documentaries out there, but they tend to be either too self-serious, or too focused on the trappings of fandom to actually say much. Traceroute manages to be a real film, with humor and true insight (sometimes called out for us—and delightfully nullified—with a blinking 'INSIGHT' faux-HTML tag onscreen), primarily because it focuses on Grenzfurthner's personal journey, and he doesn't take himself too seriously. Let's put that another way: The director uses himself and a handful of subjects to create his story, and that specificity—coupled with his playfulness—makes it work. At one point he licks the chrome head of a Terminator prop. Then he licks a zombie head prop. Then he licks the propmaster himself. It's delightful."[12] Pop culture magazine Boing Boing calls Traceroute "a brilliantly careening biography of a highly enigmatic species. [...] Traceroute is radical individual empiricism, a narrative biographical puzzle and an experimental projection matrix. Despite continual stimulus satiation, it is wonderful fun: the film tickles the synapses with a perfectly mixed cocktail of collectively shared context and quirkiness."[13] Patrick Lichty of net culture magazine Furtherfield calls it "magical (...) After watching Traceroute, I was left with a real exhilaration and a deeply reflective feeling at once. (...) What Traceroute reveals is the tradition of alterity just beneath the surface of Western culture, and that it has a powerful effect on our mass consciousness, whether it is in plain sight or not."[14] Felix Knoke of Engadget Germany writes: "For me it is the best nerd documentary I've seen so far. Simply for the fact that it doesn't take itself as deadly serious as the other ones. (...) Traceroute deserves high praise because it represents an old-school definition of nerd culture, one that is never compatible with fintech, unicorn and iGod."[15] Pop culture critic Thomas Kaestle comments: "Traceroute is game, challenge, encyclopedia, and sentimental journey all in one. As a documentary it is most skillfully composed. And as a narration it is highly compatible. This film will, in passing, sweep proclaimed nerds off their feet. And it will touch the hearts of those who still need some explanation."[16] Diamond in the Rough Films praises Grenzfurthner's hosting and storytelling: "This doc works in some very unconventional ways, not the least of which is our plucky protagonist. Grenzfurthner is an absolute charmer as our host and his narration is note-perfect (the accent is so cool in that Werner Herzog kind of way). It's really rare in a documentary about a not-that-famous person where you become almost instantly won-over and invested in their personal journey."[17] Blogger and sci-fiction author Cory Doctorow states about Traceroute that "Johannes is a brilliant lunatic of surpassing and delightful weirdness."[18] MicroFilmmaker Magazine writes: "The different people Grenzfurthner chatted with were genuinely interesting and the organic way he moved from place to place was intriguing. [...] You'll find that you've learned an awful lot about technology, nerdiness, and America."[19] Richard Propes (The Independent Critic) writes: "It's challenging. It's thought-provoking. It's remarkably honest. It's well researched. [...] If you're expecting nothing more than your usual nerd doc with its cosplay cuteness and asocial gamers, you're going to be not just disappointed but probably traumatized. Grenzfurthner is clearly full-on willing to challenge culture, stereotypes, accepted thoughts and just about everything else. There's a healthy dose of sexuality in Traceroute, which one might expect, yet Grenzfurthner also immerses the film in politics, activism and social shifts. [...] Refreshingly devoid of the pretentiousness so often found amongst truly intellectual films, Traceroute is simultaneously a pretty wonderful personal journey and an immensely satisfying cinematic experience."[20]
Awards
The film won Best Documentary Feature at the 2016 Phuture Con Festival (Denver, USA/Sapporo, Japan)[21] and the Award of Merit for Documentary Feature at the 2016 Accolade Global Film Competition.[22] It is nominated for the 2016 Austrian Documentary Award (ADA).[23]
References
- ↑ Peter Muehlbauer, Telepolis, March 7, 2016
- ↑ Report by Lori Dorn on Laughing Squid, December 2, 2015
- ↑ Review on Furtherfield; March 11, 2016
- ↑ Interview with Johannes Grenzfurthner about Traceroute, Boing Boing magazine; April 14, 2016
- ↑ Review on Press Play by Marco Rauch, March 14, 2016
- ↑ Review by John F. Nebel on Metronaut, February 16, 2016
- ↑ Dorian Waller. "Pornos und tote Hühner". derStandard.at.
- ↑ Production information on IMDb
- ↑ Traceroute at NYC Independent Film Festival
- ↑ DOK.fest Munich, list of screenings 2016
- ↑ List of screenings on Traceroute's homepage
- ↑ Chris Higgins on Mental Floss, May 1, 2016
- ↑ "The story of Traceroute, about a Leitnerd's quest", Boing Boing magazine; April 14, 2016
- ↑ Patrick Lichty, Furtherfield; March 11, 2016
- ↑ Felix Knoke on Engadget Germany, March 23, 2016
- ↑ Thomas Kaestle on Zebrabutter, January 13, 2016
- ↑ Mark Schwab, Diamond in the Rough Films, March 2016
- ↑ Cory Doctorow, Traceroute trailer, 2016
- ↑ Jeremy T. Hanke, MicroFilmmaker Magazine; April 15, 2016
- ↑ Richard Propes, The Independent Critic; April 2016
- ↑ Phuture Con Festival 2016
- ↑ Accolade Global Film Competition, Awards of Merit 2016
- ↑ Austrian Documentary Award (ADA) nominee list 2016