Anthropocene
Friday, 3 September, 14:40 - 15:49 / Kijkhuis 2
Saturday, 4 September, 13:50 - 15:20 / Kijkhuis 2
It is often said humans are the only species that is able to perceive itself as separate from the world it inhabits. In complete disregard of that illusory separation, nature undeniably affects us and is affected by us. The films in this session set out to investigate the ambivalent way in which we relate to nature, considering the irrevocable damage engendered by humankind, as well as the primal forces that hide within individuals.
On Saturday 4 September, Yngwie Boley, J.J. Epping and Diana van Houten (Pilar), and Sverre Fredriksen and Serge Onnen (L’eau faux) will join us for a Q&A.
Duration
69 min.
Based on the ancient animistic beliefs and nature-worshipping rituals in Mongolia and Siberia, the film explores the indigenous worldview and wisdom: Nature is the homeland of human being.
“Sarna” reflects on the human condition in a non-human environment. A story of howls, barks and desolate glances in the outskirts of the Pan American Highway where most of its inhabitants are stray dogs that roam erratically through the gray and melancholic streets.
Lucia owns a family olive grove together with her brother Donato, but her trees have stopped producing as they once did because of a parasite that caused most of the trees to dry out.
There is friction in the water. An entity of nature, constantly manipulated. Something happened, when water became a 'thing' that you can buy in a bottle…
A dangerous intruder gives Pilar the chance to discover the wild animal within and the means to escape the post-apocalyptic village she lives in.