The Act of Seeing with One's Own Eyes

1971·United States·32 min.
The Act of Seeing with One's Own Eyes
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Forensic pathologists perform autopsies. The first two consist of examination, measurement, and checking muscles. The remaining ones involve cutting away bone to expose and examine internal organs, peeling back skin and muscle, removing organs, using syringes to extract bodily fluids, and cutting pieces of tissue. Clothes are inventoried. As each autopsy ends, bodies are covered with sheets. There is no soundtrack. We see a body with extensive burns. The work is sometimes delicate, sometimes not; but it's always gory so be warned.

ScreenwriterStan Brakhage
CinematographyStan Brakhage
Original titleThe Act of Seeing with One's Own Eyes