Feature Film Program
2:1 by 2/3: Computer Chess, sitrep, and the Sony tube camera
This one-of-a-kind screening pairs Andrew Bujalski’s 2013 Sundance-winning cult favorite with Blair Barnes’ 2026 docu-short, two works harnessing the unstable textures of vintage Sony tube cameras to create worlds that feel both archival and strangely alien. Featuring a special post-show presentation by Barnes, using the hardware!
Sat Aug 1 8:00 PM
The Films
Computer Chess
Andrew Bujalski | US | 92
In the early 1980s, young computer geniuses take part in a tournament to see who can create a program that will enable a computer to beat a human player at chess.
sitrep
Blair Barnes | US | 17
Within a single conversation on April 13th, 2025, in tandem with collaborators James Parker, Dylan M. Howe and Ethan Loafman, Barnes assumes the framing of a situation report via tape loops, reamping, and a Sony apparatus.
Event Details
8:00 PM
Doors Open
9:00 PM
Film Begins
10:50 PM
Science on Screen Presentation by sitrep filmmaker Blair Barnes
11:00 PM
Afterparty
Computer Chess was released in 2013, after being filmed entirely on three Sony AVC 3260’s which were custom-fitted with an extra BNC outlet to make a stable, recorded image possible. Ultimately, one of the 3260’s was the main workhorse, as the 2:1 signal in the other two were less reliable. Matthias Grunsky would describe the camera as having a “...transcendental character,” which endures as a representation of the Sony AVC 3250. sitrep, which will be making its debut in 2026, uses the 3250 as its foremost camera, with the Sony FX6 as the digital intermediary. Filmed almost entirely inside of an abandoned dialysis center, the project makes work of worldbuilding through encompassing tape loops and mismatches in frequency and frame rate to produce varied flicker lines, whereas Computer Chess transforms a murky hotel into uncanny chess tournament sprawl. Beyond Bujalski’s precision in nailling the period, the 3260 itself is an apt co-conspirator in slipping the piece into an idiosyncratic otherworld.
The common denominator is the ⅔ inch tube. The evident draw is in the utility of the tube camera, and it is also in how these projects use inverse methods to speak to time, whether as a phonetic marker in sitrep, or an approximation of period in Computer Chess. There is also chronological resonance with the 1969 AVC 3260 being used in 2013, and its successor, the 1974 AVC 3250 being used in 2025 —Blair Barnes
The common denominator is the ⅔ inch tube. The evident draw is in the utility of the tube camera, and it is also in how these projects use inverse methods to speak to time, whether as a phonetic marker in sitrep, or an approximation of period in Computer Chess. There is also chronological resonance with the 1969 AVC 3260 being used in 2013, and its successor, the 1974 AVC 3250 being used in 2025 —Blair Barnes
TICKETS
Venue
The Old American Can Factory
232 Third St., Brooklyn, NY 11215
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