The Underwater Chainletter
Compiled in October 1996 by Miranda July
-
-
The Underwater Chainletter, Booklet by Miranda July, designed by July and Julia Bryan-Wilson – Front Cover
-
-
The Underwater Chainletter, Booklet by Miranda July, designed by July and Julia Bryan-Wilson – p.1
-
-
The Underwater Chainletter, Booklet by Miranda July, designed by July and Julia Bryan-Wilson – p.2
-
-
The Underwater Chainletter, Booklet by Miranda July, designed by July and Julia Bryan-Wilson – p.3
-
-
The Underwater Chainletter, Booklet by Miranda July, designed by July and Julia Bryan-Wilson – p.4
-
-
The Underwater Chainletter, Booklet by Miranda July, designed by July and Julia Bryan-Wilson – p.5
-
-
The Underwater Chainletter, Booklet by Miranda July, designed by July and Julia Bryan-Wilson. 1996. Page 6.
-
-
The Underwater Chainletter, Booklet by Miranda July, designed by July and Julia Bryan-Wilson – p.6
-
-
The Underwater Chainletter, Booklet by Miranda July, designed by July and Julia Bryan-Wilson – p.8
-
-
The Underwater Chainletter, Booklet by Miranda July, designed by July and Julia Bryan-Wilson – p.9
-
-
The Underwater Chainletter, Booklet by Miranda July – p.10
-
-
The Underwater Chainletter, Booklet by Miranda July, designed by July and Julia Bryan-Wilson – p.11
-
-
The Underwater Chainletter, Booklet by Miranda July, designed by July and Julia Bryan-Wilson – p.12
-
-
The Underwater Chainletter, Booklet by Miranda July – p.13
-
-
The Underwater Chainletter, Booklet by Miranda July – p.14
-
-
The Underwater Chainletter, Booklet by Miranda July, designed by July and Julia Bryan-Wilson – p.15
-
-
The Underwater Chainletter, Booklet by Miranda July, designed by July and Julia Bryan-Wilson – p.16
-
-
The Underwater Chainletter, Booklet by Miranda July, designed by July and Julia Bryan-Wilson – p.17
-
-
The Underwater Chainletter, Booklet by Miranda July, designed by July and Julia Bryan-Wilson – p.18
-
-
The Underwater Chainletter, Booklet by Miranda July, designed by July and Julia Bryan-Wilson – p.19
-
-
The Underwater Chainletter, Booklet by Miranda July, designed by July and Julia Bryan-Wilson – p.20
-
-
The Underwater Chainletter, Booklet by Miranda July, designed by July and Julia Bryan-Wilson – p.21
-
-
The Underwater Chainletter, Booklet by Miranda July, designed by July and Julia Bryan-Wilson – p.22
-
-
The Underwater Chainletter, Booklet by Miranda July, designed by July and Julia Bryan-Wilson – p.23
-
-
The Underwater Chainletter, Booklet by Miranda July, designed by July and Julia Bryan-Wilson – p.24
-
-
The Underwater Chainletter, Booklet by Miranda July, designed by July and Julia Bryan-Wilson – p.25
-
-
The Underwater Chainletter, Booklet by Miranda July, designed by July and Julia Bryan-Wilson – p.26
-
-
The Underwater Chainletter, Booklet by Miranda July, designed by July and Julia Bryan-Wilson – p.27
-
-
The Underwater Chainletter, Booklet by Miranda July, designed by July and Julia Bryan-Wilson – p.28
-
-
The Underwater Chainletter, Booklet by Miranda July – p.29
-
-
The Underwater Chainletter, Booklet by Miranda July – p.30
-
-
Back cover of The Underwater Chainletter booklet, written by Miranda July and designed by July and Julia Bryan-Wilson. 1996.
Dr. Wilkins was an ophthalmologist that mis-prescribed medication to an uninsured July in her early 20s, which resulted in severe health complications.
In their few spare moments betwixt catechism and baton twirling, Daughters of Houdini (Carolyn and Zoey) conjure up bloody recipes and melodic hocus-pocus.
Daybreak is a 10-minute 16mm b&w narrative film on the conflict between three women when one of them is raped by a cop.
This is a story about a girl who likes a girl who likes horses. A memory of girlhood lust and loss. An excerpt from the compilation “Odd Girl Out.”
Basically my short flick satirizes our own denial of violence (not always “physical”).
This movie is about three worlds: Disneyland, Graceland, and Neverland.
Goddess Kring is a show based on non-scripted improvisational performance by me alone. I speak for freedom to be your unique self and express it fully.
I made Atlanta during two weeks in July. It was a million degrees in my apartment so I was living under cold water in my bathtub. I borrowed Tammy Rae’s video camera. And I edited it at Reed College (pretended I went there). It’s about pressure.
This film was made using a piece of “headgear” constructed around a 16mm film camera. The video serves to highlight the satirical juxtaposition of his machine-like character in a body building environment.
Hey our movies are almost never planned out, but Fiona actually wrote out a script for this. So now we believe in scripts. We would like to see more loudmouthed, rude girls with guts, not this over-abundance of duh that seems to be on the rise. We are understanding though. Joy to the world.