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Powaqqatsi

  • 1988
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 39m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
9.2K
YOUR RATING
Powaqqatsi (1988)
DocumentaryMusic

An exploration of technologically developing nations and the effect the transition to Western-style modernization has had on them.An exploration of technologically developing nations and the effect the transition to Western-style modernization has had on them.An exploration of technologically developing nations and the effect the transition to Western-style modernization has had on them.

  • Director
    • Godfrey Reggio
  • Writers
    • Godfrey Reggio
    • Ken Richards
  • Stars
    • Christie Brinkley
    • David Brinkley
    • Patrick Disanto
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    9.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Godfrey Reggio
    • Writers
      • Godfrey Reggio
      • Ken Richards
    • Stars
      • Christie Brinkley
      • David Brinkley
      • Patrick Disanto
    • 45User reviews
    • 43Critic reviews
    • 57Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos77

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    Top cast6

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    Christie Brinkley
    Christie Brinkley
      David Brinkley
      David Brinkley
        Patrick Disanto
        • Self
        Pope John Paul II
        Pope John Paul II
          Dan Rather
          Dan Rather
            Cheryl Tiegs
            Cheryl Tiegs
              • Director
                • Godfrey Reggio
              • Writers
                • Godfrey Reggio
                • Ken Richards
              • All cast & crew
              • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

              User reviews45

              7.29.2K
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              Featured reviews

              jxhensley

              Educational

              Koyannisqatsi wasn't a copy of anything, so why would anyone expect Powaqqatsi to be a copy of it? Fortunately, I saw this film on the big screen without seeing its predecessor, and I was delighted. The movie begins with a shot of an African diamond mine. You see a miner ascending a ladder in slow-motion, carrying a bag of mud on shoulders, accompanied by a heavy, pounding music. The effects and the music work together to highlight the miner's tiredness and strain. Other images follow, most of them from the "third world." In each case the focus is not a thing, but a quality.

              Powaqqatsi revolutionized my concept of the world -- Go ahead and laugh! The film shows a vastness and variety and energy in the world that was beyond anything I could have imagined when I went into the theater. Everything is presented for what it is; there's no Western narrator to reassure you and tell you what everything means. There is perhaps no higher praise for a film than saying it changed the way I think, and Powaqqatsi deserves that praise.
              EnglishmaninNY

              Improves on repeated viewing

              My first impression agreed with the post above but it grows on you. Here are some reasons why.

              Koyaanisqatsi was made by Americans, about America, for Americans.

              The image style and content and the soundtrack (turn it up, even better by the 1998 rerecorded soundtrack and turn it up) are all familiar to American eyes and ears.

              Poyaanisqatsi was made by a mixed team of nationalities about the countries of the Southern hemisphere. It goes places where we do not usually go, we face the unfamiliar. The soundtrack does the same thing. It uses rhythmical and melodic styles from the countries visited, once again unfamiliar to our American eyes and ears.

              I enjoy Koyaanisqatsi for the awesome imagery including time scale effects a nd the unusual view it presents to us of what we live in everyday.

              Both movies use picture with music but no words. The creators intended it to carry a message but left it to the viewer to create it. Here's a single example from the opening of K.

              The visual shows the beginning of man's journey from Earth to moon, and the camera is put where we can see the rocket engines come to life close up. The soundtrack is completely contrary to the obvious visual idea. Instead of trumpet fanfares and explosions of sound we strain to hear deep solo voices chanting the title of the movie over and over as the dramatic rocket launch visual is slowed down so that 3 seconds ocupies 3 minutes. The result is a strange contrast between sound and vision which stands apart from conventional ideas. AS the rocket trembles in a shower of ice we are invited to ponder all the meanings that this event might possess and the space and time provided for our imagination to operate inside encourage the same contrary thoughts. The time distortion means that we no longer experience the explosive impulse created by man's mastery of metal, electricity and chemicals and let loose in a mighty roar when the clock counts ZERO.

              Here there is no clock, the deep voice marks the passage of time and the picture we see is of some machine never seen before that can rise gently up into the air to the sound of chanting.

              Poyaanisqatsi explores the more ancient ways still existing, outdoor manual labor rather than factories, seasonal activities, self sufficiency by sailing, fishing, digging, plowing, reaping and grinding the crop on small scales.

              Less time is given over to time compression which was a strong feature of Koy'si. More time is given to time expansion, slow-motion cinematography and multiple exposure process. We spend time with the camera close up with people, individuality begins to become important as we are able to disriminate groups and individuals within groups.

              The second half of 'P'begins to include material that may have a direct distressing affect on the viewer, perhaps only an uncomfortable feeling at first, which in my experience with repeated viewing, becomes stronger. There are a handful of moving images that for me have become outright disturbing, and more so each time I see them. There is sense of something dreadfully wrong going on, that we know about but are helpless and unable to name it and abolish it.

              If anything the soundtrack of 'P' is superior to 'K' but again upon repeated listening. There is a piece of singing (at about 80 mins) that is in Muslim religious style and which blew my socks off with the combination of vocal strength and clarity, subtlety of melody, subtlety of rythmyic phrasing and powerful capability to attract attention.

              I have no hesitation recommending 'K' to anyone including children. 'P' is more difficult, by the end you have seen some uncomfortable truths about the poor quality of life affecting a large proportion of the world population. How comfortable can we be on our sofas watching this tale be told to us?
              Koyaanis83

              I can't describe it, but I don't truly mean that in a positive sense.

              Koyaanisqatsi, which is Powaq's predecessor and successor, is my all-time favorite film. It has the beautiful cinematography of Ron Fricke and Godfrey Reggio with the wonderfully-timed score of Philip Glass merged into an emotion-evoking, powerfully mindblowing cinematic experience, after which the viewer feels weak. But watching this, I appreciated the wonderful cinematography and the--ahem--interesting music, but it evoked no emotions inside me, and I felt I hadn't learned anything from it except the things we see in those "You, too, can sponsor a child" television ads. It's quite an experience, and I don't wholly denounce it or condemn it, but I wouldn't expect another Koyaanisqatsi. I hope Naqoyqatsi has "packs the same emotional wallop" of the original.
              nitratestock35

              better title: Not Baraka

              As mentioned earlier by others, this film is basically a weaker

              version of Baraka (by Koyaanisqatsi cinematographer Ron Fricke),

              a film very much like Powaqqatsi, focussing some more on the

              religious rituals of southern hemisphere cultures.

              Powaqqatsi definitely is a disappointment as a follow up of

              Koyaanisqatsi. There is no consistence of any kind. Some scenes

              are going on for way too long (the gold mine sequence in the Serra

              Pelada, Brazil is nice but becomes tiresome already before the

              main title). Other sequences are uneven and cluttered and we

              don't know where we are. The movie is almost entirely overcranked (in slow motion), as

              opposed to the perfect combination of time lapse (much of it with

              motion blur to make it smoother plus smooth camera panning),

              slow motion and the use of stock footage in Koyaanisqatsi which

              had a wonderful atmosphere to it and works on many levels.

              Powaqqatsi is supposed to make no statement about how things

              should be - according to director Godfrey Reggio. Why then the

              sequence editing US American tv commercials and military

              images (is this evidence of how Reggio felt about Powaq. not

              coming close to Koyaanis. in meaning)?

              Powaq.'s photography is of great quality, yet many motifs are

              simply not interesting enough to be on screen for that long. I have

              the feeling that the team simply didn't come home with enough

              interesting footage in the can and had to make something out of

              what they had in the editing room. The few great shots which lets

              us emerge in unfamiliar worlds don't make up for the higher

              percentage of footage of no interest whatsoever.

              Check Ron Fricke's "Baraka" to see what Powaqqatsi could have

              been and should have been.

              I also agree about some comments regarding Philip Glass' score.

              It is sometimes is flat out corny and sounds very much like what

              one might expect in a late 1980s "we are all one world" beer or

              cookie commercial. Philip Glass is a great and original composer for symphonic

              minimalism, but as a composer of world music he hasn't got the

              vein. The Powaq. score is several notches below the magic of

              what he did for Koyaanis. Again: Baraka has a better score as well.

              Watch Powaqqatsi to ifill yourself in on the second installment of

              the ..qatsi trilogy. It's not a bad film, but IMHO Godfrey Reggio was

              unable to deliver the footage for this concept. Ron Fricke did it in

              "Baraka".
              8miagy

              Godfrey continues his journey , still on the road

              The imaginative slow-motion documentary without any line,sequence, camera just goes through nature , cities and public over third world counties. Everydays routines seems amazing , ordinary motions put in slow are breath-taking.Sense for camera scenes and views and extraordinary shots make this one worth to see. Plus mixed with Philip Glass's composed music - it is relaxing and mild. Also you can find some scenes showing our world going to destructive end and the most moving scene in the end when there is shown that we mostly even can not see pictures like these because this "kind" of world is situated behind a certain curtain, for most of us hard to see through - we live above and look only to our reflections.

              More like this

              Naqoyqatsi
              6.4
              Naqoyqatsi
              Koyaanisqatsi, la prophétie
              8.2
              Koyaanisqatsi, la prophétie
              Anima Mundi
              7.5
              Anima Mundi
              Baraka
              8.5
              Baraka
              Chronos
              7.7
              Chronos
              Samsara
              8.4
              Samsara
              Visitors
              6.2
              Visitors
              Once Within a Time
              5.8
              Once Within a Time
              Hyper Materialism (Koyaanisqatsi)
              Hyper Materialism (Koyaanisqatsi)
              The Original Badass
              The Original Badass
              Powaqqatsi: Impact of Progress
              6.6
              Powaqqatsi: Impact of Progress
              Sacred Site
              8.2
              Sacred Site

              Related interests

              Dziga Vertov in L'Homme à la caméra (1929)
              Documentary
              Prince and Apollonia Kotero in Purple Rain (1984)
              Music

              Storyline

              Edit

              Did you know

              Edit
              • Trivia
                The opening images are of the Serra Pelada goldmines in Brazil.
              • Connections
                Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Willow/Jack's Back/Assault of the Killer Bimbos/Powaqqatsi/Da (1988)
              • Soundtracks
                Opus
                Written by Patrick Disanto

                Performed by 9

                Courtesy of number9ine Records, USA, A Division of Polydor Records

                Under License from number9ine Special Markets

                all rights reserved IDP, BMI publishing, 1986.

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              FAQ18

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              • What does Powaqqatsi mean?

              Details

              Edit
              • Release date
                • June 2, 1988 (West Germany)
              • Country of origin
                • United States
              • Official site
                • Official Site
              • Languages
                • Hopi
                • English
                • Spanish
              • Also known as
                • North South
              • Filming locations
                • Jaisalmer, Rajasthan, India
              • Production companies
                • Golan-Globus Productions
                • NorthSouth
                • Santa Fe Institute for Regional Education
              • See more company credits at IMDbPro

              Box office

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              • Budget
                • $2,500,000 (estimated)
              • Gross US & Canada
                • $589,244
              • Opening weekend US & Canada
                • $27,899
                • May 1, 1988
              • Gross worldwide
                • $592,592
              See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

              Tech specs

              Edit
              • Runtime
                • 1h 39m(99 min)
              • Color
                • Color
              • Sound mix
                • Dolby SR
                • 12-Track Digital Sound
              • Aspect ratio
                • 1.85 : 1

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