Multiple SIDosis

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Revision as of 20:28, 13 March 2021 by Umbire the Phantom (talk | contribs) (Whitespace removal, could always use more tropes but has more than the requisite dozen so removing the template)

Former vaudevillian and amateur filmmaker Sid Laverents wrote, directed and starred in Multiple SIDosis, a short film from 1970 that features a dozen Split Screens of him playing a variety of musical instruments simultaneously. Each of Laverents's musicians displays a different character with its own costume and hairstyle as they unite to perform the song "Nola," a novelty ragtime number popularized in the 1920s. Coupling his own ingratiating persona, painstaking in-camera multiple exposures and complex overdubbing, Laverents created a film that may be amateur but not amateurish.

Multiple SIDosis was added to the National Film Registry in 2000.

Tropes used in Multiple SIDosis include: