A singular artist and activist, Godfrey Reggio is best known for
the galvanizing films of The Qatsi Trilogy. Astonishingly
photographed, and featuring unforgettable, cascading scores by
Philip Glass, these are immersive sensory experiences that
meditate on the havoc humankind’s obsession with technological
advancement has wreaked on our world. From 1983’s Koyaanisqatsi
to 1988’s Powaqqatsi to 2002’s Naqoyqatsi, Reggio takes us on a
journey from the ancient to the contemporary, from nature to
industry, exploring life out of balance, in transformation, and
as war, all the while keeping our eyes wide with wonder.
DIRECTOR-APPROVED THREE-BLU-RAY SPECIAL EDITION FEATURES
* New, restored digital transfers of all three films, approved by
director Godfrey Reggio, with 5.1 DTS-HD Master Audio soundtracks
* Essence of Life, an interview program with Reggio and composer
Philip Glass on Koyaanisqatsi
* New interview with cinematographer Ron Fricke about
Koyaanisqatsi
* Television spots and a new interview with Reggio relating to
his 1970s multimedia privacy campaign in New Mexico
* Early forty-minute demo version of Koyaanisqatsi with a partial
scratch soundtrack featuring poet Allen Ginsberg, along with a
new introduction by Reggio
* New interview with Reggio about Koyaanisqatsi’s original visual
concept, with behind-the-scenes footage
* Impact of Progress, an interview program with Reggio and Glass
on their collaboration
* Inspiration and Ideas, a new interview with Reggio about his
greatest influences and teachers
* Public television interview with Reggio from 1989 about the
trilogy
* Anima Mundi (1992), Reggio’s twenty-eight-minute montage of
footage of over seventy animal species, scored by Glass
* New video afterword by Reggio on the trilogy
* The Making of “Naqoyqatsi,” a brief documentary featuring
interviews with the production crew
* Panel discussion on Naqoyqatsi from 2003, with Reggio, Glass,
editor Jon Kane, and music critic John Rockwell
* Interview with Glass and cellist Yo-Yo Ma
* Trailers
* PLUS: A booklet featuring new essays by film scholar Scott
MacDonald, Rockwell, and author and environmentalist Bill
McKibben
KOYAANISQATSI
An unconventional work in every way, Godfrey Reggio’s
Koyaanisqatsi was nevertheless a sensation when it was released
in 1983. This first work of The Qatsi Trilogy wordlessly surveys
the rapidly changing environments of the Northern Hemisphere, in
an astonishing collage created by the director, cinematographer
Ron Fricke, and composer Philip Glass. It shuttles viewers from
one jaw-dropping vision to the next, moving from images of
untouched nature to others depicting human beings’ increasing
dependence on technology Koyaanisqatsi’s heterodox methods
(including hypnotic time-lapse photography) make it a look at our
world from a truly unique angle.
POWAQQATSI
Five years after Godfrey Reggio stunned audiences with
Koyaanisqatsi, he again joined forces with composer Philip Glass
and other collaborators for a second chapter. Here, Reggio turns
his s on third-world nations in the Southern Hemisphere.
Forgoing the sped-up aesthetic of the first film, Powaqqatsi
employs a meditative slow motion in order to reveal the beauty of
the traditional ways of life in those parts of the planet, and to
show how cultures there are being eroded as their environments
are taken over by industry. This is the most intensely spiritual
segment of Reggio’s philosophical and visually remarkable Qatsi
Trilogy.
NAQOYQATSI
Godfrey Reggio takes on the digital revolution in the final
chapter of his Qatsi Trilogy. Through a variety of cinematic
techniques, including slow motion, time-lapse, computer-
generated imagery, and found footage, the film tells of a world
that has completed the transition from the natural to the
artificial. Globalization has been accomplished, all of our
interactions are technologically mediated, and all images are
manipulated. From this (virtual) reality, Reggio sculpts a
frenetic yet ruminative portrait of an era in which the cacophony
of “communication” has rendered humankind effectively
postlanguage.