Norman McLaren’s most important creation strategy was that of making a film completely by hand: not only the visuals, which he painted or scratched directly on film, but also sound and –most important– motion. He propounded muscular memory to control the formal differences between successive images (1976/1978), proclaiming the physiological development of a consciousness of movement. Thus neglecting what has always been considered up to now the main ontological foundations of film: the automatic recording of physical reality. At the same time he was questioning the epistemological model they integrate, i.e. the perception of order and the ways in which that order is imposed upon reality by films and the technology which holds them. In this ...