Playlist

2021 Cinéma du Réel (March 12-21)

The science documentaries at Cinéma du Réel in 2021
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A River Runs, Turns, Erases, Replaces

FILM United States 2021 · 87 min
Shengze Zhu

<p>A portrait of urban spaces along the Yangtze River in the city of Wuhan. An engaging communal stage on which people perform in various ways: some dancing, singing, swimming; some shoveling, welding and hammering. An evolving landscape that is continuously sculpted by nature and dramatically altered by roaring machines and rising infrastructure.</p> <p>March 2020, a Wuhan street literally comes to a halt, passers-by stop moving at the sound of a siren. A few moments later, they set off again on their way. Like many others, this city came to a stop this year but has since come back to life. The currents of the Yangtze river, however, have not weakened. The river, which crosses the city and region, runs through and structures the wide static shots of Shengze Zhu&rsquo;s film. The peaceful images leave us time to explore and take our bearings. We follow the bridges to locate where we are, the city is tied up then untied under the filmmaker&rsquo;s patient gaze. Barely changing the shot scale, she builds a landscape film, a river film, to trace back and observe the anatomy of the territory. Wild animals are close by, we guess that an urban hurricane has hit. Construction works dot the vicinity of the Yangtze, a new bridge now straddles it, everything changes. Not its inhabitants. They are still found at the river&rsquo;s edge: walkers, bathers, dancers, workers. The bustle of this imposing city is discreet. On the surface of the shots, letters appear. They talk about recent bereavements due to the Covid epidemic and the inhabitants&rsquo; pain. Greater forces then come adrift, but even if the river submerges the new roads, it will never cover the memories of the stories attached to its tireless, insurmountable course, and its banks still receive the narratives of those who have passed by. And while the face of Wuhan becomes disfigured, the river bed does not forget.</p> <p>- Cl&eacute;mence Arriv&eacute;</p>

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earthearthearth

FILM Canada 2021 · 30 min
Daïchi Saïto

<p>Dawn breaks where land is flesh And bones&rsquo; echoes; You&rsquo;ve lived through extinctions &ndash; Stars, skies, sand and seas; Future is catching us up at last, And all the dead are ahead of us.</p> <p>An experimental Japanese filmmaker based in Montreal, where he co-founded the Double Negative Collective, Da&iuml;chi Sa&iuml;to was one of the three artists invited by the Canadian curator Oona Mosna to film in the Andean mountains as part of the Underground Mines Program, which has already given birth to Malena Szlam&rsquo;s Altiplano (Cin&eacute;ma du r&eacute;el 2019). No less sumptuous, earthearthearth adopts a very different formal strategy, preferring the static majesty of the landscapes in 35 mm to their geological particularities. It took five years for the film to emerge from the secrets and contingencies of his photochemical work. This points up the prudence that the idea of landscape inspires in the filmmaker, as well has his curiosity for what it hides and the feelings it kindles, his reticence to simply represent its beauty, which he instead integrates into the very substance of the celluloid film. Sa&iuml;to lays claim to the haptic planeness of the image, where mountain summits divide vibrant masses. The images are like pieces taken from the rock and lengthily subjected to chemical processes similar to those that erode the land. As in Engram of Returning (2015), the images are offered up to the structural improvisation of saxophonist Jason Sharp &ndash; who uses the rhythm of his heart beat and acts on this through a circular breathing technique &ndash; and form an impressive hypnotic meditation on the instability of matter, the future of the earth and the need to think about how things interrelate.</p> <p>- Antoine Thirion</p>

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Armour

FILM Portugal, Canada 2020 · 30 min
Sandro Aguilar

<p>Hector&rsquo;s father was sick and died. His girlfriend left him for an older guy, went back to her parents house taking their eleven-year-old son to meet his new dad. Hector was drunk-stiff. He happened to be wearing a light-cavalry armour he had borrowed from a paramedic he knew. There was a medieval party going on and the town was on fire.</p>

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Citadel

FILM United Kingdom 2020 · 16 min
John Smith

<p>Filmed from the artist&rsquo;s window during lockdown, a combination of fragments from British Prime Minister Boris Johnson&rsquo;s speeches relating to coronavirus with views of the London skyline. Recognising the British government&rsquo;s decision to place business interests before public health, it relocates the centre of power from Parliament to the financial district of the City of London.</p>

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End of the Season

FILM United States 2020 · 13 min
Jason Evans

<p>At the end of the season, a group of matsutake mushroom hunters search for rare subterranean treasures in the high desert of Oregon&rsquo;s Cascade mountain range.</p>

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Faraway My Shadow Wandered

FILM Singapore, Taiwan, Japan 2020 · 70 min
Liao Jiekai

<p>As a child, Junya promised his maternal grandfather to take over the family Shinto shrine. This did not come to pass as he did not share the same family name and grew estranged from his relatives. To escape this tension, Junya ventured overseas to pursue other dreams and distanced himself from his hometown. One day, while working in an Izakaya, he meets a foreigner researching a new dance piece. Together, they revisit Junya&rsquo;s hometown to let go of a promise he cannot fulfil.</p>

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Feast

FILM Netherlands 2021 · 84 min
Tim Leyendekker

<p>Based on the infamous Groningen HIV Case, in which three men drugged other men and infected them with their own HIV-infected blood.</p>

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Figure Minus Fact

FILM USA 2020 · 13 min
Mary Helena Clark

<p>Night, like mourning, remakes space through absence: forms at the threshold of perception heighten sound and touch. When someone dies there is a pull towards the concrete and tangible, but disbelief creates a world of unreliable objects.</p>

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The Filmmaker’s House

FILM United Kingdom 2020 · 75 min
Marc Isaacs

<p>When the Filmmaker is told his next film must be about crime, sex or celebrity to get funded, he takes matters into his own hands and begins shooting in his home with a cast of characters connected to his own life. Two English builders, employed to replace the garden fence, temporarily remove the barrier between the house and a Pakistani neighbour. A homeless Slovakian man charms the Filmmaker&rsquo;s Colombian cleaner to let him in and tests everyone&rsquo;s ideas of boundaries and hospitality.</p>

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Flowers Blooming In Our Throats

FILM Italy 2020 · 9 min
Eva Giolo

<p>A 16 mm cinematic poem shot just after the 2020 COVID‑19 lockdown: a group of friends perform domestic gestures&mdash;touching, cooking, spinning a toy top&mdash;captured through an eerie red filter. The film explores the fragile balance between tenderness and latent violence in everyday life.</p>

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FREIZEIT ODER: DAS GEGENTEIL VON NICHTSTUN (FREIZEIT or: the opposite of doing nothing)

FILM Germany 2021 · 71 min
Caroline Pitzen

<p>Berlin. Summer 2018. They are 17 years old. The diverse neighborhood they grew up in is one big construction site, where people have to give way to the dreams of others. They drift through the city and wonder how anyone will be able to live in this city in the future. They are always in discussion: about everyday sexism, the individual&rsquo;s responsibility for the system in which we live. What is happening and what should happen is in contradiction, but they keep faith.</p>

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The I and S of Lives

FILM United States 2021 · 7 min
Kevin Jerome Everson

<p>The &ldquo;I&rdquo; and &ldquo;S&rdquo; of &ldquo;Lives&rdquo; are the smoothest area of resistance. A rollerblader (Jahleel Gardner) navigates the letters on the pavement of Black Lives Matter Plaza in Washington D.C. on a summer afternoon, 2020.</p>

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The Inheritance

FILM United States 2020 · 100 min
Ephraim Asili

<p>After nearly a decade exploring different facets of the African diaspora &mdash; and his own place within it &mdash; Ephraim Asili makes his feature-length debut with The Inheritance, an astonishing ensemble work set almost entirely within a West Philadelphia house where a community of young, Black artists and activists form a collective. A scripted drama of characters attempting to work towards political consensus &mdash; based partly on Asili&rsquo;s own experiences in a Black liberationist group &mdash; weaves with a documentary recollection of the Philadelphia liberation group MOVE, the victim of a notorious police bombing in 1985. Ceaselessly finding commonalties between politics, humor, and philosophy, with Black authors and radicals at its edges, The Inheritance is a remarkable film about the world as we know it.</p>

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Paysages résistants (Landscapes of Resistance)

FILM France, Serbia, Germany 2021 · 95 min
Marta Popivoda

<p>Landscapes of Resistance traces a journey through the memories of antifascist fighter Sonja (97), one of the first female partisans in Yugoslavia, who was also one of the leaders of the Resistance movement at Auschwitz. We make her story travel through time towards the bodies of the new generation of antifascists, bespeaking that it is always possible to think and practice resistance.</p>

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Odoriko

FILM Japan, United States, France 2020 · 114 min
Yoichiro Okutani

<p>Odoriko are dancers of the dying art of Japanese strip theater. Once a popular form of entertainment alongside standup comedy, today all but 20 strip clubs have closed nationwide. Still, the women travel solo with their costume cases from one dressing room to another.</p>

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Patrick

FILM United Kingdom 2020 · 21 min
Luke Fowler

<p>Evocation of the life of the music producer Patrick Cowley, taking in the postindustrial charms of San Francisco&rsquo;s now-gentrified South of Market district, once famous for its dance clubs and leather bars, as if searching for Cowley&rsquo;s still-lingering energy.</p>

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Les Prières de Delphine (Delphine's Prayers)

FILM Belgium, Cameroon 2021 · 91 min
Rosine Mbakam

<p>This film is the portrait of Delphine, a young Cameroonian girl. Like others, she belongs to the generation of young African women crushed by our patriarchal societies and abandoned to Western sexual colonization as her only means of survival. Through her courage and strength, she exposes these patterns of domination that continue to lock up African women.</p>

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Rock Bottom Riser

FILM USA 2021 · 70 min
Fern Silva

<p>From the earliest voyagers who navigated by starlight to the discovery of habitable planets by astronomers, Rock Bottom Riser examines the all-encompassing encounters of an island world at sea. As lava continues to flow from the earth&rsquo;s core on the island of Hawaii&mdash;posing an imminent danger&mdash;a crisis mounts. Astronomers plan to build the world&rsquo;s largest telescope on Hawaii&rsquo;s most sacred and revered mountain, Mauna Kea. Based on ancient Polynesian navigation, the arrival of Christian missionaries, and the observatory&rsquo;s ability to capture the origins of the universe, Rock Bottom Riser surveys the influence of settler colonialism, the search for intelligent life, and the discovery of new worlds as we peer into our own planet&rsquo;s&nbsp;existence.&nbsp;</p>

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Sol de Campinas

FILM Brazil 2021 · 26 min
Jessica Sarah Rinland

<p>Archaeologists have been excavating a ring of mounds surrounding a central plaza within a territory currently known as the State of Acre, Brazil. They transition from field to laboratory, interpreting how the land was constructed, what patterns were employed in settlement land use, and the composition of the anthropogenic earth that remains.</p>

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Taming the Garden

FILM Georgia, Germany, Switzerland 2021 · 90 min
Salomé Jashi

<p>A powerful man, who is also the former prime minister of Georgia, has developed an exquisite hobby. He collects century old trees along Georgia&#39;s coastline. He commissions his men to uproot them and bring them to his private garden. Some of these trees are as tall as 15-floor-buildings.</p>

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Tellurian Drama

FILM Indonesia 2020 · 26 min
Riar Rizaldi

<p>Mount Malabar in West Java, Indonesia, shows us a spectrum of human-nature relationships: the Dutch colonial government saw the mountain as a suitable spot for an antenna for radio transmission; for indigenous communities, the mountain itself is a partner for spiritual communication. In Riar Rizaldi&rsquo;s eclectic essay film, archival history collides with personal narratives on the history of technology, nature and colonization. A shaman&rsquo;s breath-taking zither performance brings us a moment of clarity.</p>

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Avant que le ciel n’apparaisse

FILM France 2021 · 85 min
Denis Gheerbrant

<p>A horde of wild horses, historians who sing songs of the colonial war against the Russian empire, young people dancing on a public square, villagers cobbling together their own museum : in a small Caucasian republic, a whole people remembers. And, all along, the painter Rouslan Tsrimov guides us into the way of living and the thoughts of the Nartes, the mythical ancestors, as recounted by their saga.</p>

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Baleh-baleh

FILM France 2021 · 51 min
Pascale Bodet

<p>I give a friend a tale to read. He leaves his house, walks across the countryside, repeats the tale to himself, and arrives at the sea. And so it was that a stonecutter, who became rich, then king, then sun, then cloud, then rock, became a stonecutter once again.</p>

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Corps Samples

FILM France 2021 · 14 min
Astrid de la Chapelle

<p>At the beginning, there is simultaneity. A marine fossil of a crinoid discovered near the summit of Mount Everest, a famous British mountaineer who vanishes, and a Russian statesman who dies are the starting points of a story on the transformation of matter. Of these bodies, gone in 1924, all that remains is everything.</p> <p>The film is a free and transversal exploration of terrestrial matter and its transformations. The preserved bodies of George Mallory and Lenin, one fossilized by weather conditions, the other embalmed with the use of petrochemistry, have become, in a way, the eternal achievements of the political ideologies that had moved them. Humans have permutated their original organic cycle in order to nestle within other, larger cycles of the Earth. Produced using original 16mm and images found on the internet, the various levels of imagery and the intrinsic textures of each medium telescope and merge into a kind of hallucinatory flow.</p>

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Dear Hacker

FILM France 2021 · 61 min
Alice Lenay

<p>The LED on my webcam started flashing for no reason. Is it possible that an observer, a hacker, a friend or ghost is currently housed in my webcam? I embark on a series of video-calls to find out what this elusive entity wants with me.</p>

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Désir d’une île

FILM France 2021 · 80 min
Laetitia Farkas

<p>Somewhere in France, at the edge of a pine forest facing the ocean, a hidden holiday camp created by white Russians over seventy years ago. In this summer kingdom, there are children, animals, wooden huts, babushkas and floral fabrics. Generations that live and grow together. And also an old man who is going to die, a son who wants to leave and a child who watches them.</p>

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Foedora

FILM France 2021 · 80 min
Judith Abensour

<p>In May 2016, a new museum dedicated to Palestinian history and culture opened in Ramallah. Inaugurated with no exhibition, the museum remained empty for several months until a first exhibition devoted to Jerusalem was organised. The film takes place over this transition period, during the construction of a dream city, in sharp contrast with a political reality that makes the future prospects for a Palestinian State increasingly hypothetical.</p>

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Garage, des moteurs et des hommes

FILM France 2021 · 71 min
Claire Simon

<p>A small picturesque Proven&ccedil;al village. Certainly, I grew up there, but today life seems to have somewhat deserted it. Except for the car and motorcycle repair garage where everyone, I mean the men, come to have their car serviced. What do they do? What do they talk about? A breakdown develops into a nail-biting suspense, the garage becomes the place of masculine transmission. Men are amongst themselves and repair metal bodies.</p>

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Incandescence des hyènes

FILM France 2021 · 54 min
Nicolas Matos Ichaso

<p>In Ethiopia, Harari blacksmiths have the reputation of turning themselves into hyenas and roaming the streets of the old city. An immersion in the work of Ethiopian blacksmiths, who live on the fringes of society. As a backdrop, the unnerving nocturnal beauty of Harar and its inhabitants&rsquo; passion for khat. At night, working bodies change shape and the possibility of metamorphosing from blacksmith into hyena creates a shift in reality.</p>

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Ivre de soule

FILM France 2021 · 29 min
Skander Mestiri

<p>The year 2020 is a difficult one for U.S.D.B., the amateur rugby club that represents Dieulefit, a small town in southern France. The number of lost matches is growing and they face the humiliation of being downgraded in the regional ranking. A decisive match is soon to be played at home in Dieulefit. The stakes are higher than ever: save the club&rsquo;s honour, make their fans, family and pals proud, and defend their home territory.</p>

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Kindertotenlieder

FILM France 2021 · 27 min
Virgil Vernier

<p>Based on television news footage, a look-back at the 2005 riots in France, which erupted following the death of two teenagers being chased by the police.</p>

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Living with Imperfection

FILM France 2021 · 66 min
Antoine Polin

<p>In his Boston basement apartment, which seems to come straight out of an old film noir, the great American pianist Ran Blake lives alone and endlessly fine-tunes his indefinable sound. For over 70 years, he has been driven by his obsession with cinema, which, in turn, has galvanized his music, creating a unique conversation between these two arts.</p>

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Nightvision

FILM France 2021 · 37 min
Clara Claus

<p>Clara films her solitary everyday life working in a photographer&rsquo;s studio in the Hamptons, near New York. In this lakeside house, she discovers on the video surveillance recordings the presence of a man who comes to watch her through the windows at nightfall. With her sole companion, Clarita, the photographer&rsquo;s dog, she faces her solitude and this shadowy presence.</p>

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Random Patrol

FILM France 2021 · 30 min
Yohan Guignard

<p>Law and order are Matt&rsquo;s duties. Every morning, this US police officer in the suburb of Oklahoma City takes his car to patrol in town. Every morning, he worries about the arrests of the day. Every morning, he wonders how much this job has changed him.</p>

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Saxifrages, quatre nuits blanches

FILM France 2021 · 74 min
Nicolas Klotz

<p>In the shadows of Low Life, a secret ceremony dedicated to thirteen guardians of humanity&rsquo;s common treasures, love and resistance, youth and poetry, equality and difference, insurrection and revolution. Saxifrages &hellip; These rootless plants&rsquo; windblown destiny is a soft perseverance doubled by an imperceptible intransigence, which, in time, imposes on the hardness of stones a patience that can break them</p>

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Silabario

FILM France 2021 · 12 min
Marine de Contes

<p>An Island, a poem, a dream. Disappearance and reappearance of a whistled language, Silbo. History and transmission of this miraculous heritage from the island of La Gomera.</p>

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Un mal sous son bras

FILM France 2021 · 16 min
Marie Ward

<p>At night, a group of men gather on the stadium of an elite school they once attended. Some of them are the big winners in this new society. Colonists on their own land, they look away so as not to see the gangrene that is growing there.</p>

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Un monde flottant

FILM France 2021 · 56 min
Jean-Claude Rousseau

<p>Between rain and clearer spells, in the footsteps of Ozu in today&rsquo;s Japan, people met, wordless encounters&hellip; Also some seismic events, a trembling of the ground which does not interrupt the course of the film. And just for the sake of a story: a forgotten umbrella in a hotel room.</p>

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Un souvenir d'archives

FILM France 2021 · 45 min
Christophe Bisson

<p>Archivist and researcher Isabelle Ullern investigates the official archives of philosopher Sarah Kofman. &ldquo;I become her ventriloquist&rdquo;, she says. Digging into the archives, she brings back the memories of Sarah, who committed suicide in October 1994 &mdash; her works as a philosopher and her past as a hidden child of the Holocaust&hellip; For the duration of the film, Isabelle embodies Sarah.</p>

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VENICE BEACH, CA.

FILM France 2021 · 79 min
Marion Naccache

<p>Dawn in Venice Beach, California. Every morning, the homeless living by the beach wake up and have to tidy up the space where they spend the night. As the sun slowly rises, their voices express their views of the world. Every morning, as in a Sisyphean play, it looks as if nothing has changed. Every morning, little by little, the neighbourhood by the sea they call home and the country are changing in strange and terrifying ways.</p>

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Golda Maria

FILM France 2020 · 115 min
Hugo Sobelman

<p>In 1994, Partrick Sodelman filmed his grandmother, Golda Maria Tondovska, giving us the testimony of a Jewish woman born in 1910 and her journey through the century and its horrors. In 2020, Patrick and his son, Hugo, made this personal account into a film.</p>

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DAS NEUE EVANGELIUM (The New Gospel)

FILM Germany, Switzerland 2020 · 107 min
Milo Rau

<p>What would Jesus preach in the 21st century? Who would his disciples be? And how would today&rsquo;s bearers of secular and spiritual power respond to the return and provocations of one of the most influential prophets and social revolutionaries in human history? Set in the southern Italian town of Matera, where both Pasolini and Gibson shot their legendary films on the life of Jesus, director Milo Rau (Das Kongo Tribunal, Locarno 2017) and his team return to the origins of the gospel and stage it as a passion play of an entire civilization. Together with Cameroonian political activist Yvan Sagnet, Rau creates a biblical story that couldn&rsquo;t be more topical. With &ldquo;The Revolt of Dignity&rdquo; they have created a political campaign that fights for the rights of migrants who came to Europe across the Mediterranean to be enslaved on the tomato fields in southern Italy and to live in ghettos under inhumane conditions. An authentically political as well as theatrical and cinematic New Gospel for the 21st century emerges. A manifesto of solidarity with the poorest, a revolt for a more humane world.</p>

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Nous (We)

FILM France 2021 · 114 min
Alice Diop

<p>Just like Fran&ccedil;ois Maspero at the end of the 1980s, Alice Diop takes us on a journey across the Parisian region to meet its inhabitants. Humble and attentive, the director takes a fresh look at a multicultural territory marked by History, far removed from the usual media caricatures.</p>

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Ziyara

FILM France, Morocco 2020 · 99 min
Simone Bitton

<p>Ziyara means visit to the saints, a popular practice common to both Jews and Muslims in Morocco. Today most of the Jews have left, but their saints are still there. The director goes to meet their guardians, humble and magnificent muslim caretakers of her Jewish memory. The wound of separation is still open, the echo of the Middle Eastern wars hunts silently the encounter, but the camera reweaves the link. It gathers stories, smiles, hospitality and blessings, carrying the film towards a new complicity between the filmer and those who are filmed.</p>

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C’est ainsi qu’on va vers l’été (THIS IS HOW WE GO TOWARDS SUMMER)

FILM France 2020 · 36 min
Calypso Baquey

<p>Jacqueline is hospitalised in a long-term care unit. Her carer, Kani, has followed her from her home to the hospital. Over time, the two women forge a singular relationship. Next to Jacqueline&rsquo;s ailing body and impaired memory is Kani&rsquo;s solid stature and zest for life. Jacqueline is my mother.All three of us are in the same boat, this film is our crossing.</p>

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Diane

FILM France 2020 · 16 min
Ludovic Hadjeras

<p>Diane is a young tracker. Camouflaged in an outfit covered with 3D snowscape patterns, she criss-crosses the Vall&eacute;e de la Clar&eacute;e looking for wolves. She follows what looks like a promising trail. The tracks in the snow are fresh, she hears their howling.</p>

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Les étoiles

FILM France 2021 · 33 min
Nina Orliange

<p>Andr&eacute;a wants to become a K-Pop idol. Elise, Fiona, Anna and L&eacute;onie meet up every Saturday to perfect their choreography. Guiliana practices Baton Twirling. She spends her days at &Eacute;tienne&rsquo;s, in this bedroom full of Black Metal prints. Kathleen is daydreaming while listening to music. With her friends, they&rsquo;re getting ready for this upcoming party, taking pictures of themselves, fantasizing.</p>

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I tried to shout with them

FILM Iran, France 2020 · 10 min
Nafiseh Moshashaeh

<p>France, Strasbourg, 2019, an immigrated Iranian woman, who is an art student, floating through and observing her new life while she is still attached to her past. Lost in the past and present of her personal, social and political lives, she struggles to understand and survive in the paradoxical parallel worlds&hellip; living somewhere in between.</p>

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La Llorona

FILM France 2020 · 30 min
Ophélie Noury

<p>&ldquo;Mich&egrave;le Firk came to Cuba, not just to breathe the air of revolution as others do, but to serve it. She was internationalist. It was not a word, it was fully her.&rdquo; Fran&ccedil;ois Maspero</p>

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Nuisibles

FILM France 2020 · 36 min
Paolo Jacob

<p>For crows, corn field are like vast open-air feeders. The future harvests would vanish in a few hours, if Fanny did not show up, present from dawn to dusk, like a living scarecrow.</p>

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Palermo Sole Nero

FILM France 2021 · 26 min
Joséphine Jouannais

<p>Dennis and Ibra live in Palermo without knowing how long they can stay there. When Ibra disappears, Dennis sets off to look for his friend in the town under the gaze of the patron saints.</p>

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Sain uu?

FILM Switzerland, Mongolia 2020 · 29 min
Anouk Maupu

<p>Nomingerel, Egshiglen, Bayarjavkhlan and Enkhmaa, aged from 13 to 18, live in Khatgal, a village in northern Mongolia. Over several months, they filmed with their smartphones and, through their teenage eyes, show us the portrait of a rapidly changing country.</p>

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Tony

FILM Switzerland 2019 · 7 min
Alexandra Simpson

<p>As a hurricane draws near, a man seeks refuge in a supermarket.</p>

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Wadi Jhannam

FILM France 2020 · 33 min
Zoé Filloux

<p>Hicham, a botanist, lives in Beirut. As soon as he can, he goes off to work in northern Lebanon, in the Valley of Hell. Before he leaves, as he is walking and during his breaks, he tells me about his profession. When Hicham talks, his stories resonate with those of a country in crisis.</p>

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Aline Cézanne

FILM France 2010 · 20 min
Pierre Creton Vincent Barré

<p>During the summer, 2008, we accompany our friend Christine Toffin to visit Aline C&eacute;zanne, her aunt, granddaughter of the painter. It is in her old people&#39;s home in Bourron-Marlotte that was alsol the village of her childhood, where she evokes her family stories between C&eacute;zanne and Renoir. A portrait where paintings and cinema meet, a story of the XXth century which brings us to this threshold of intimacy where life and creation mingle.</p>

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L'Arc d'Iris, souvenir d'un jardin

FILM France 2009 · 30 min
Pierre Creton Vincent Barré

<p>Five weeks in the Himalayas, three weeks hiking in the Spiti valley&hellip;.We thought of opening the film with a garden, here in France, in Normandy or the Loiret region, with the both of our gardens, where we grow a few Himalayan plants: aquilegia, mugwort, thalictrum&hellip;(and those that eluded our expectations: meconopsis, peonies). We found it very moving to discover these plants &ldquo;in their home&rdquo;&hellip;.Given the splendid beauty of the scenery and its inhabitants, we hadn&rsquo;t imagined that we would be spending so much time with our eyes glued to the ground. We thought of the idea of scale, on the spot, while filming the flowers. We constantly had to lie on our stomach to film these modest flowers better, in their relationship to the immensity of the landscape.</p>

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L'avenir le dira

FILM France 2019 · 26 min
Pierre Creton

<p>I met Pierre twenty-five years ago, when I set up a stand next to his on F&eacute;camp market; he was selling poultry and eggs, me flowers and honey. We soon got used to going to the caf&eacute; together before the first customers arrived. A ritual renewed with his son Arnaud thanks to the film, when I asked him if could follow them and film the flax harvesting (was it perhaps unconsciously a way of forming with Arnaud a friendship I endlessly sought with his father?). How can &ldquo;real&rdquo; friendship be transcribed onto film? Whoever looks at a real friend sees one&rsquo;s other self, but an ideal self). A film with no subject; I obviously wanted it simple. So the only pleasure left was filming, the land, bodies: I found a land and companions. I followed Pierre and Arnaud as they harvested, with the same need as theirs to get the job done: making images.</p>

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La Cabane De Dieu

FILM France 2020 · 16 min
Pierre Creton

<p>From his father, Pierre inherited a wood that he looks after and, in the middle of the wood, a cabin, his father&rsquo;s old hunting lodge where Pierre now enjoys spending time alone with his dog. There, he made a film which he has just completed, twelve years after an unsuccessful attempt. One of the first shots shows the cabin from a steep high-angle view as if seen from the top of one of the trees bordering the glade. More than Thoreau&rsquo;s cabin, this shot brings to mind Edison&rsquo;s Black Maria studio. Like the house in Vattetot, the wood cabin is a film studio. And a haunted house.</p>

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Côté jardin

FILM France 2011 · 4 min
Pierre Creton

<p>Pierre Creton placed his camera opposite the small black table that had always stood in the middle of the lawn facing the front of the house. He filmed himself gardening &ndash; potting plants, preparing cuttings. Cat, dog, donkey, hens are moving about, playing, resting around the table, the goat is prancing on the table top, the whole menagerie is living its life, crossing the frame freely. On these images of perfect insouciance, he edited the sound of a radio news report about the Fukushima disaster. The date is March 2011: here, the garden, the end of winter and the pleasure of plunging one&rsquo;s hand into the earth, touching the plants, to prepare for spring&rsquo;s arrival; over there, death, sky and sea contaminated for many years, untouchable. The garden is not at odds with the disaster provided it heeds its echo, albeit unwillingly. The garden table is also the altar where domestic rituals are performed to ward off the horror</p>

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Deng Guo Yuan, in the garden

FILM France 2010 · 20 min
Pierre Creton Vincent Barré

<p>During a trip to China with Vincent to meet people in art schools and universities, I discovered the work of Deng Guo Yan, the director of the Tianjin school of contemporary art. A painting style that seemed to me to be a mix of traditional Chinese painting, Claude Monet and Cy Twombly, and which I liked. The black and white of his large ink brush paintings on paper, almost the size of a mural, made it possible for me to jump from black and white to colour in this film, as I had done in the Recueil but with other connotations: with excerpts from Jean Renoir in Aline C&eacute;zanne, photos of Le Havre destroyed in Papa, Maman, Perret et moi, and infrared images taken by Georges-Arthur Goldschmidt in Le Paysage pour t&eacute;moin</p>

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Détour, suivi de Jovan From Foula

FILM France 2009 · 30 min
Pierre Creton Vincent Barré

<p>It was on Foula, the furthest island from the main island [Shetland Isles], that we ran into Jovan. Or rather he ran into us, coming off the ferry late in the day. The mist was thick and we looked worn-out. He took us under his wing and offered to show us around the island the following day. There is a long sequence shot of the passing scenery, taken from inside his car. Driving along the only road, Jovan pointed out to Vincent the island&rsquo;s disarray: abandoned cars and tractors, heaps of rusting scrap metal. Then on another island, Papa Stour, with a view of Foula, we filmed what was to become the first part of the film</p>

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Dialogue de l’arbre (Carte postale à Pierre Creton)

FILM France 2016 · 11 min
Sophie Roger

<p>From her window, Sophie Roger gazes upon the landscape captured in her earlier film Les Jardiniers du petit Paris. She addresses her friend and fellow filmmaker Pierre Creton, playfully exploring their shared creative territory. Through the simple presence of her cat and a distant tree, she crafts a humorous and intimate reflection on friendship and artistic dialogue</p>

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L'Heure du Berger

FILM France 2008 · 39 min
Pierre Creton

<p>The title came to me from Samuel Beckett&rsquo;s book on Proust, in which he recalls that a new form of advertising appeared post-war, one that not only imposes a product, but also the time of day it has to be consumed: &ldquo;Midday, seven o&rsquo;clock: time for a Berger.&rdquo; I knew this advert but it was on rereading this passage that I realised how similar it was to the shot where I&rsquo;m alone drinking a [glass of] Berger, with the label clearly visible, and where the church bells are striking seven o&rsquo;clock. Berger pastis is, of course, completely associated with Jean [Lambert], with our get-togethers, our weekly aperitifs. L&rsquo;Heure du Berger is the recreation of Maniquerville. They were both made at the same time. In addition to Jean&rsquo;s insistent &ldquo;return&rdquo; to his house, as his ghost inviting me to make this film, it is perhaps the heaviness of shooting Maniquerville that led me to make this film using such a light and intuitive touch</p>

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Les Jardiniers du Petit Paris

FILM France 2010 · 30 min
Sophie Roger

<p>Through her window, Sophie films her neighbours tending a community vegetable garden across the seasons. Meanwhile, she reads passages from L&eacute;vi‑Strauss&rsquo;s Tristes tropiques, occasionally stepping into the frame to meet her neighbours and take their portraits&mdash;a quiet essay on proximity, attention, and everyday communal life</p>

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Le Bel Été

FILM France 2019 · 80 min
Pierre Creton

<p>Robert, Simon, and Sophie live by the English Channel in Normandy, their routines gently disrupted when Nessim&mdash;a refugee from Africa&mdash;and two boys join them. Together, they form a transient, Utopian household shaped by care, hospitality, and daily work over the course of a summer</p>

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Le Grand Cortège

FILM France 2011 · 30 min
Pierre Creton

<p>The film follows the relocation of elderly residents from the gerontology center of Maniquerville to a newly rebuilt facility in October 2010. Through ambulances, funerary processions, and the restored vintage car that abounds as a metaphor, Creton captures a poetic yet haunting meditation on aging, death, and the rituals of passage</p>

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Maniquerville

FILM France 2009 · 83 min
Pierre Creton

<p>In a geriatric center in Maniquerville, Fran&ccedil;oise Lebrun reads Proust to elderly residents, prompting them to reflect on memory and the passage of time. Relationships form&mdash;especially between Lebrun and Clara Le Picard&mdash;that transform the space into a living Proustian landscape, blurring the boundaries between narrative and life</p>

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Le Marché, petit commerce documentaire

FILM France 2012 · 30 min
Pierre Creton

<p>Pierre Creton returns to the F&eacute;camp market, where he once sold honey and flowers, to film its everyday rhythms. He reflects on community, local commerce, and the connection between humans, animals, and cinema. A philosophical thread runs through the film via a voice-over reading of Koj&egrave;ve&rsquo;s Introduction to the Reading of Hegel, linking human desire, division of labor in beehives, and the intimacy of neighborhood life</p>

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Mercier et Camier

FILM France 1998 · 15 min
Pierre Creton

<p>Based on Samuel Beckett&rsquo;s novel, the film stages an intimate adaptation of Mercier et Camier inside the coach running between F&eacute;camp and Le Havre. Creton joins Sophie Roger and Marie Le Pallec to enact the journey, blending literary dialogue with subtle movement through familiar landscapes</p>

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Mètis

FILM France 2007 · 32 min
Vincent Barré

<p>A meeting between friends, two sculptors: Vincent Barr&eacute; and Richard Deacon. The studio: a space for producing sculptures and for conversation, and a frame assigned to the camera. But it&rsquo;s also the camera that commands us to leave this studio, to open up to another archaic workspace at the foundry, to open to its darkness dotted by incandescence. And then, even more openness, in a backward movement, the filmed image goes back to the source of its sculpted shapes. Images as proof of their relation, the landscape and rites in the Mediterranean parade: Cistercian architecture in Provence, ancient Greek sites, Holy Week processions in Sicily. Slowly, reminiscence returns, accompanied by essential texts, Empedocles and Bataille, read by Fran&ccedil;oise Lebrun. Then, what was supposed to be illuminated gets blurred, what was supposed to guide gets scattered. Instead of informing, form gets deformed.</p>

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Papa, maman, Perret et moi. Un appartement pour témoin

FILM France 2010 · 30 min
Pierre Creton Vincent Barré

<p>Commissioned by the City of Le Havre and the Mus&eacute;e Malraux, the film places viewers inside Auguste Perret&rsquo;s historic &ldquo;show‑apartment.&rdquo; We follow everyday guided tours, but gradually discover that the guides&mdash;a couple and their young son&mdash;actually live there. Domestic life subtly unfolds alongside public visits, blurring boundaries between staged fiction and reality. It raises questions: Who are the residents? What is real? What is shown?</p>

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Paysage imposé

FILM France 2009 · 50 min
Pierre Creton

<p>At an agricultural school in Yvetot, students and teachers reflect on and explore the meaning of &quot;landscape&quot;&mdash;not just the familiar environment but also its historical and evolving role&mdash;through observation and experience over an academic year.</p>

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Le paysage pour témoin. Rencontre avec Georges-Arthur Goldschmidt

FILM France 2010 · 43 min
Pierre Creton Vincent Barré

<p>Over four days, Pierre Creton and Vincent Barr&eacute; accompany Georges‑Arthur Goldschmidt back to the Haute‑Savoie landscapes of Meg&egrave;ve&mdash;where he was hidden during WWII&mdash;and film his encounters with the families who sheltered him, exploring memory, exile, and the profound bond between geography and identity</p>

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Petit traité de la marche en plaine

FILM France 2014 · 26 min
Vincent Barré Pierre Creton

<p>A walker who crosses three regions: Vattetot-sur-mer in the Pays-de-Caux region, Saint-Firmin-des-Bois in the G&acirc;tinais region, and Carrouge in Switzerland, drawing an imaginary geographical thread between the places where we live and the place where Gustave Roud spent time on his family farm in the Pays-de-Vaux region. This film was inspired by Gustave Roud&rsquo;s text, whose title we have borrowed. Travelling through landscapes, looking closely at the tiny and changing forms of nature, meeting living beings &ndash; animals and people</p>

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Secteur 545

FILM France 2004 · 110 min
Pierre Creton

<p>In the Caux region, Sector 545 denotes the boundaries within which Pierre Creton carries out his job as a milk quality controller for those cattle farmers who request his services. During his regular visits, Pierre Creton strikes up friendships and dares to ask some questions, especially the following: between man and animal, what&rsquo;s the difference? Once over their initial surprise, the farmers join in his game.</p>

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Sept pièces du puzzle néo-libéral

FILM France 1997 · 20 min
Pierre Creton

<p>In 1997, while assisting his friends Yves &Eacute;douard and Patrick H&eacute;bert with the harvest, Creton is struck by an article in Le Monde Diplomatique&mdash;&quot;The Fourth World War Has Begun&quot; by Subcomandante Marcos. He uses this revelation as the impetus to craft a short, reflective essay on neoliberalism as a new form of territorial conquest</p>

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Simon, At the Crack of Dawn

FILM France 2009 · 16 min
Pierre Creton

<p>Simon, At the Crack of Dawn is the fifth film that Pierre Creton and Vincent Barr&eacute; have made together. As the film is the quintessence of poetic cinema, it is impossible to lock any subject into the confines of a form, which is nonetheless as round as a cob loaf. What we can try to write about is the resonance of signs, the vibrations of matter and the mysterious radiation of meaning between the images and sounds&hellip; If the film were to lend itself to a summary, a single sentence would suffice and would describe the most banal reality: &ldquo;Before dawn, while people are still asleep in their beds, a baker makes his bread&rdquo;. But this would be to disregard two shots that ill fit such a narrative&hellip; and which tip Simon, at the crack of dawn towards a tale of fantasy.</p>

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Soleil

FILM France 1990 · 3 min
Pierre Creton

<p>My first work with disabled children. I had proposed to the CESAP (Committee for Studies and Care of People with Multiple Disabilities) to film a summer stay with the children. I made an institutional film for them, for me a film with Yvan and Adeline</p>

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Sur la voie critique

FILM France 2017 · 150 min
Pierre Creton

<p>A profound meditation on departure, learning, and personal transformation: in the first version, Pierre and Yassine leave their respective schools and homes to travel&mdash;one along the Seine through the banlieue‑Paris region, the other by train line toward the countryside&mdash;ultimately converging at Monet&rsquo;s garden in Giverny. Through drawing, filming, encounters, and reflection, the film explores how love of a place instigates the desire to move on and to discover oneself</p>

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Un dieu à la peau douce

FILM France 2019 · 6 min
Pierre Creton

<p>In a sequence shot, the slightly slowed movement of hands manipulating and caressing the surface, whose texture is like skin criss-crossed with scars, a wax sculpture that is vaguely anthropomorphic. The sound is the voice of Mathieu Amalric, giving a raw account of three nights of sex that Simon shares with Robert and Nessim, their African lover. With this ball of black matter, a dark satellite seemingly detached from its feature film, Pierre Creton reveals the night-time, and painful, reverse shot of Bel &eacute;t&eacute;&rsquo;s gentle community Utopia.</p>

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Une saison

FILM France 2002 · 15 min
Pierre Creton

<p>A filmmaker enters the life of Yves &Eacute;douard, an eccentric endive farmer, to document his work. Encountering Catherine Pernot, he crafts a poetic double portrait: first her theatrical narration of farm life, then a candid interview with Yves, blending documentary and fiction to explore storytelling and labor</p>

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Va, Toto !

FILM France 2017 · 92 min
Pierre Creton

<p>This essay-like documentary weaves together three rich narratives: the arrival of a young wild boar, Toto, at Madeleine&rsquo;s home; Vincent&rsquo;s journey to India and his encounters with monkeys; and Joseph, an elderly farmer whose sleep apnea&ndash;induced dreams reveal his inner world. Through split-screen composition and layered voiceovers&mdash;acted by renowned voices over non-actor subjects&mdash;the film explores human&ndash;animal relationships, memory, care, and the poetic textures of everyday life.</p>

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Le Vicinal

FILM France 1994 · 12 min
Pierre Creton

<p>A young Creton, newly relocated to the Pays de Caux and working in a grain silo, uses his camera to film local beekeeper Marcel Pilate during honey extraction ceremonies. The film blends rural labor rituals and personal discovery, emphasizing ceremonial gestures and the sacred relationship between man and nature</p>

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La Vie après la mort

FILM France 2002 · 23 min
Pierre Creton

<p>After months of observing him from afar, Creton approaches Jean Lambert, an aging recluse, under the pretext of buying milk. Their weekly dinners, late-night conversations, drunken bicycle rides, and shared music spur a collaborative film project. When Lambert dies unexpectedly in April (the year of an eclipse), Creton completes the film &ldquo;without him,&rdquo; turning it into a tender portrait and poetic tribute to their friendship</p>

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Le Voyage à Vézelay

FILM France 2005 · 30 min
Pierre Creton

<p>Shortly after his father&rsquo;s death in April 2005, Creton travels to V&eacute;zelay&mdash;the burial site of Georges Bataille&mdash;accompanied by friends Marie Le Pallec and B&eacute;na&iuml;d Mostefa&iuml;. With Fran&ccedil;oise Lebrun&rsquo;s poetic off‑screen narration, the film weaves an intimate and reflective pilgrimage that blends grief, memory, companionship, and philosophical musings on life and death</p>

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As I Was Moving Ahead, Occasionally I Saw Brief Glimpses of Beauty

FILM United States 2000 · 288 min
Jonas Mekas

<p>My film diaries, 1970&ndash;1999. It covers my marriage, children are born, you see them growing up. Footage of daily life, fragments of happiness and beauty, trips to France, Italy, Spain, Austria. Seasons of the year as they pass through New York. Friends, home life, nature. Nothing extraordinary, nothing special, things that we all experience as we go through our lives. There are many intertitles that reflect my thoughts of the period. The soundtrack consists of music and sounds recorded mostly during the same period from which the images came. The piano improvisations are by Auguste Varkalis. Sometimes, I talk into my tape recorder, as I edit these images, now, from a distance of time. The film is also my love poem to New York, its summers, its winters, streets, parks</p>

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E agora ? (What Now?)

FILM Portugal 2013 · 164 min
Joaquim Pinto

<p>For twenty years, Joaquim Pinto has been living with HIV and hepatitis C. Exiled in the countryside near Lisbon with his husband Nuno and their dogs, Joaquim decided to stop all his activities around cinema to follow a new protocol. A filmed diary, a reflection on a survival exceeding all the prognostics, but also on love, friendship, cinema and Portugal from the revolution through to the current crisis.Where can you find the example, find the teaching able to rectify the path of life? The film points to nothing and, fortunately, simply meanders around. Two paths, nonetheless, that are only half-revealed. The Christian path, represented by Nuno, a Christ-like figure with the same message of peace, steeped in gospels but hostile towards bell towers. Pinto is not a believer and leaves God out of his film. Yet, he helps his lover to record the words of John and makes room for a Bible, supposedly the Book of Life but here transformed into a support emptied of the hereafter. The other path is traced by insects. What Now? opens with a slug slowly crossing the frame. It will be followed by dragonflies, bees and mantises, and reinforced by images of vegetal stalks or discreet flowers. An epiphany of the microcosm, a manifestation of the living, poles apart from man, a teeming world at our feet which Pinto contrasts with the sick desires to conquer space. Bible and beetles commune under the auspices of the infinitely renewed miracle.There is an old legend in the West whose brilliance was highlighted by Nietzsche: only an illness that strikes you down gives access to great health, to a genuine blossoming of life, only when your failures are revealed is the world&rsquo;s hidden depth revealed. It is uncertain whether Pinto subscribes to this belief, he who is trying to annihilate the imaginary that has latched onto the virus. But, taking a different path, his film ends up with a similar idea, AIDS can reveal by a process of reduction, reveal what? &ndash; not La-Vie (Life), a coarse myth, a crude trap, but rather en-vie (desire), existence traversed by intensities, a new wind of desires that have again taken on their full dimension, the germinating power of life here below.</p>

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L'Île déserte

FILM France 2014 · 21 min
Sophie Roger

<p>The island in question will be imaginary, following on from that envisaged by Gilles Deleuze in his eponymous text, as a utopia and a space for possible beginnings. It will also have its Friday and be inspired by Joyce&rsquo;s Ulysses. We will pick flowers there, dig the earth and dream. An island to be lived on, a garden to be cultivated. A garden of Eden as the setting.</p>

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A Portrait of Ga

FILM United Kingdom 1952 · 4 min
Margaret Tait

<p>The &lsquo;Ga&rsquo; of the title refers to the film maker&rsquo;s mother. The film gathers together this elderly lady&rsquo;s everyday actions to offer an abstract insight into her life.&rsquo;My mother seemed a good subject for a portrait, (she was there), and I thought it offered a chance to do a sort of &lsquo;abstract film&rsquo;, in the sense that it didn&rsquo;t have what you might call &lsquo;the grammar of film&rsquo;. It&rsquo;s mostly discontinuous shots linked just by subject, in one case by colour, only rarely by movement&rsquo;.</p>

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Aerial

FILM United Kingdom 1974 · 4 min
Margaret Tait

<p>Touches on elemental images ; air, water, (and snow), earth and fire (and smoke) all come in to it. The track consists of a drawn-out musical sound, single piano notes and some natural sounds&rsquo;.&lsquo;Yes, really a very simple film, if you allow yourself to respond to it instead of trying to follow it intellectually. There is no narrative and no argument, it seems more like a musical theme conjured out of the whole rather than presented as point to be taken. There&rsquo;s a general theme of the four elements, earth, air, fire and water &ndash; in a different order &ndash; air, water, earth, fire and then air again, with all the elements intermingled. But just as a sort of song or even a kind of nursery rhyme. Although I don&rsquo;t understand musical structure &ndash; I can&rsquo;t really follow the structure of piece of music when I&rsquo;m listening to it &ndash; but I think that film- structure is more like musical structure than anything else</p>

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Tailpiece

FILM United Kingdom 1976 · 9 min
Margaret Tait

<p>Lingering shots of house and garden accompanied by music, song and poetry provide an appropriate goodbye to Margaret Tait&rsquo;s empty house and studio in Buttquoy, Orkney.</p>

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Garden Pieces

FILM United Kingdom 1998 · 11 min
Margaret Tait

<p>A set of three &lsquo;film poems&rsquo; composed around the theme of the garden &ndash; the central one featuring hand scratched animated drawings. &lsquo;Round the Garden&rsquo; &ndash; right round and round again, &lsquo;Garden Fliers&rsquo; &ndash; flighty cartoon and a stunner of a piano piece and &lsquo;Grove&rsquo; &ndash; grave and sonorous.</p>

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Land Makar

FILM Royaume-Uni 1981 · 31 min
Margaret Tait

<p>A landscape study of an Orkney croft, with the figure of the crofter, Mary Graham Sinclair, very much in the picture, and enriched throughout by her vivid comments. Filmed over several seasons between 1977 and 1980, it takes in many of the human activities which alter the look of the land. The croft is on the edge of a small loch where swans and other birds nest in the grass. It is worked in the old style and, although a mechanised aids are brought into use when appropriate, much is done by one woman&rsquo;s labour. The crops are hay, turnips, potatoes, kale and oats; the croft also fattens a few cattle and feeds a little flock of hens and a few ducks &hellip;. &lsquo;Makar&rsquo; is a Scots word, meaning &lsquo;poet&rsquo;. The film is worked out so that the sequences are like a number of canvases</p>

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Notes 1984, Part.3

FILM United States 1984 · 31 min
Robert Huot

<p>The Super-8 films include some of Huot&rsquo;s most impressive filmmaking and some of the most impressive Super-8 filmmaking I&rsquo;ve seen anywhere. Ironically, the handling ease and lower expense of the smaller gauge have resulted in finished films much less personally revealing than the earlier 16mm diaries and much more consciously directed toward audiences: for example, what sexuality we do see in the recent films is in the nature of performance; often Huot and his wife, painter Carol Kinne, design environments, costumes, and sound tracks for comic, pixilated sexual escapades. The Super-8 films continue to reveal Huot&rsquo;s life, but there is no longer the sense of personal investigation evident in Rolls : 1971. In its place is Huot&rsquo;s pleasure in recording the beautiful and enjoyable elements of his life and sharing them with viewers.</p>

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Le Point Aveugle

FILM France 2012 · 28 min
Sophie Roger

<p>In the enclosed space of a Normandy garden, Sophie Roger&#39;s attentive gaze captures plants and small creatures in intimate detail. As the gardener-filmmaker cares for her sick eye alongside the garden&rsquo;s flora, a subtle unease emerges&mdash;echoing distant memories of Chile&rsquo;s dictatorship&mdash;hinting at an unseen threat in this sanctuary of care and intimacy</p>

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Rolls : 1971

FILM United States 1972 · 97 min
Robert Huot

<p>To create this Huot used twenty-two rolls of film shot during 1971, along with bits of other found footage and from materials photographed during the same period. Some of this material is similar to the very best minimal rolls from One Year (1970); other portions are more like the informal later rolls of the earlier film. In addition, he included a good deal of unusually personal imagery (some of it quite sexually explicit), mostly involving himself, Twyla Tharp (she and Huot were married at the time), and their son Jesse. These various kinds of imagery are integrated within a complex and highly suggestive editing strategy.</p>

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Retour d’un repère

FILM France 1979 · 19 min
Rose Lowder

<p>The form of the film rests on a visual transposition of the structure of a &ldquo;Pantoum&rdquo;, a poetic form of Eastern origin that develops its rhythmic elements in a particular way.</p>

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Les Tournesols colorés

FILM France 1983 · 3 min
Rose Lowder

<p>In the field of sunflowers pieced together as a bouquet, the temporal superimposition and the tightly superposed shifting focal points at the heart of the motif create the effect of an impossible wind</p>

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Bouquets 1-10

FILM France 1994 · 12 min
Rose Lowder

<p>Each one-minute film is a bouquet of images woven in-camera, blending the plants on site with activities happening at the time of shooting.</p>

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Bouquets 21-30

FILM France 2005 · 14 min
Rose Lowder

<p>Each one-minute film is a bouquet of images woven in-camera, blending the plants on site with activities happening at the time of shooting.</p>

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Sources

FILM France 2012 · 5 min
Rose Lowder

<p>The gardener is surrounded by the springs of the river Aude, and one of the wellsprings of his recipes &ndash; the flowers and spices from his garden.</p>

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When the Persimmons Grew

FILM Azerbaijan, Austria 2019 · 118 min
Hilal Baydarov

<p>Immobile in a home where the sands of time fall to the rhythm of rural Azerbaijani sounds, a mother waits for her son. When he arrives, their conversations circle around existential questions and news from afar, troubling and cryptic. Unrest cloaks the world outside.When the primroses were turning red, and the white cherries were in bloom&ldquo;&mdash;that is when my grandmother says the war ended. She talks about time the way people did in olden days, before the calendar divided it up into days, months, and years. When time had no name and was not measured in numbers, it was marked by the rhythms of nature. My father was born &bdquo;when the rivers overflowed and the grass was harvested,&ldquo; says my grandmother, meaning my father was born in June. Exact dates mattered less than durations which nature filled with meaning. Time was not a line. It ebbed and flowed with the seasons, was shaped by the lifecycles of the flora and fauna. The title of my film, When Persimmons Grew, pays homage to this traditional way of denoting time. People were coming and going from my family back then. We gathered together, and we broke apart. We grew up, and set about living our own lives. Everything was changing and becoming more colorfull, for all except my mother, whom time left alone. I left home then and returned eight years later&mdash;when the persimmons grew.</p>

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A lua platz

FILM France 2018 · 97 min
Jérémy Gravayat

<p>On the outskirts of Paris, in a rapidly-changing suburb, a group of Romanian families are searching for a place to live. From their abandoned village, to the demolished slum and occupied houses, their quest weaves together a common history, forged through solidarity and marked by displacement. As we accompany them on their journey, we make this film together as an alternative living space</p>

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Her Socialist Smile

FILM United States 2020 · 93 min
John Gianvito

<p>This experimental essay resurrects the political imagination of the iconic deaf-blind author Helen Keller, a passionate socialist and disability rights advocate whose radical views, while largely suppressed or sanitized over the years, remain remarkably pertinent today.</p>

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Inside the Red Brick Wall

FILM Hong-Kong 2020 · 86 min
HK Documentary Filmmakers

<p>A visceral, first-hand account of the November 2019 siege at Hong Kong Polytechnic University during the anti-extradition protests. Filmed from within the campus by a hidden collective, the documentary captures clashes with police, tear gas, barricades, dwindling supplies, and the psychological strain of being trapped behind the iconic red brick walls.</p>

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Rêve de Gotokuji par un premier mai sans lune

FILM France 2020 · 46 min
Natacha Thiéry

<p>For the first time in 80 years, Labour Day 2020 is experienced in confinement, everywhere in the world. At the end of April 2020, as Labour Day is approaching, I am sending a cinematographic letter from Paris to a friend living in Tokyo. The two capitals are in a state of sanitary emergency because of the Covid-19 virus. As Labour Day 2020 is approaching, the memory of Labour Day 2018 in Tokyo came back to me in a dream. I describe what I am able to detect from Paris, whose inhabitants are confined and watched, day and night. At the same time, impressions of 2018 in Tokyo come back, impressions of the fiftieth anniversary of Labour Day 1968, from the march to Gotokuji temple, up to an unforgettable meeting, a stroke of luck.Struggles also are contagious and universal. And nothing can stop our dreams of a fairer society.</p>

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Who Is Afraid of Ideology? Part 3 Micro Resistances

FILM Germany 2020 · 31 min
Marwa Arsanios

<p>Marwa Arsanios&rsquo; trilogy&nbsp;<em>Who Is Afraid of Ideology?&nbsp;</em>weaves an intersectional path through the struggles of women &minus; in places such as Northern Syria and Colombia &minus; to claim the right to the land and to reconnect with nature in an unmediated way.&nbsp;<em>Part 3 Micro Resistancies</em><strong>&nbsp;</strong>takes place in Tolimo, and focuses on the ongoing systemic war waged by transnational corporations against the smallest and the most essential element of life &minus; the seed.&nbsp;<em>(&Ouml;v&uuml;l &Ouml;. Durmusoglu)</em></p>