Chronos shares its particular style with the film
Koyaanisqatsi (1982), for which
Ron Fricke was the
cinematographer, as well as his later films
Sacred Site and
Baraka (1992). The theme of the film is "the celebration of life", and does not include the themes of
technology as the culprit for society or "life out of balance", which were present in
Koyaanisqatsi.
American Cinematographer described the film as "a musical poem praising the evolution of
Western man from
Cairo to
Los Angeles." The director also used the system in his later films. Michael Stearns, while composing the soundtrack for the film, used a custom-made instrument called "
The Beam" to generate many of the sounds he required. The Beam was long, made of
extruded aluminum with 24 piano strings of gauge 19-22. The name of the film comes from the
Ancient Greek word
χρόνος,
khrónos, which means
time and is also the source to many modern terms related to time, such as
chronology,
synchronous, etc. ==Awards==