Secção:
Love in times of gentrification. Anna returns to Barcelona for a few days. Walking the neighborhood where she once lived a great love, it becomes inevitable to succumb to memories of that place, now adulterated by the tourist invasion. A narrative that uses the idea of magic realism with a charm that recalls the cinema of Hong Sang-soo. (Duarte Coimbra)
Water, fire, earth, air, green, brown, slug, dog, night, light. Francisco Janes’ work, marked by North American experimental cinema (he studied at CalArts), evokes the here and now of Peter Hutton’s landscape, the daily pictorialism of Nathaniel Dorsky and Paul Clipson’s natural symphonies. The result is an ode to the textures of nature (and digital medium), in a friendly confrontation with the abstractions of purely cinematic gaze. “Regada” crystallizes Janes’ intermediate path in the lyricism of labor and in the elements’ hypnotic becoming. (Ricardo Vieira Lisboa)
Who is Ricardo? We don’t know much, although he is known as the guy in the colorful shorts. The story goes that in 2014 he appeared on stage in colorful shorts, for an artistic performance during a Sensible Soccers concert at the Paredes de Coura festival. Since then he has never been forgotten. Ricardo is a mockumentary about Ricardo Bueno and the drama of forgetting your dance moves. Suffering for you, Ricardo. (Carlos Ramos)
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Empty time, young time, champagne flows and the conversations come out as light lines of coke that disappear in the laughter of young friends who gather in Geneva. To boast is a natural figure that feeds the tone and ‘’to have” is just a consequence to enjoy. Chic and select, they swing in their golden cages surrendered to the fruition game. The night is theirs. (Carlota Gonçalves)
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In a summery afternoon, Pierre and Bastian meet for a coffee by-the-sea. Their meeting makes an old love resurface. In a journey through the past, between a mysterious forest and a captivating sea, will Pierre and Inès see a future? (Duarte Coimbra)
It could be said that Rita Macedo’s new film collides with her previous work. In fact, the confessional voice over and the use of images from home films belong to an essayistic intimacy that was unprecedented in her films. Nevertheless, her view remains intact: the fusion of ideas in the cosmic continuity of a discourse that is both purely factual (scientific even) and purely subjective (and memorialist). Where the ontology of thought was once questioned, now is the issue of writing history (and stories) that she examines. (Ricardo Vieira Lisboa)
Every night in Shenzhen, China, a group of copyist painters starts working. Paul Heintz’s third participation in the festival (Non-contractuel, 2016 e Foyers, 2019) will register their daily lives, between art and blue-collar work.
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Frame by frame, we unlock the mystery of Shānzhài Screens. By following the artistic and technological acts of a group of copyists, Paul Heintz reflects about the moment we’re in historically, in terms of art and painting, where the idea of copying a painting seems to transform into copying a screen. (Duarte Coimbra)
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“I do see the music. This career has never been just a job, it’s been my life.”
Jim Marshall – rock n’roll photographer – is the author of emblematic images of the history of music. Jimmy Hendrix setting his guitar aflame at stage, Miles Davis sitting in a boxing ring, the boyish Bob Dylan following a stray tire down a New York street, Johnny Cash gesturing with his middle finger, Janin Joplin at home, or The Beatles in them last concert. There are countless moments captured by Marshall that became famous. A man of intense temperament, a life of excess and battling inner demons, who was loved or hated, there was no in-between. “If he loved you, he would lie down in front of a truck for you. If he hated you, he would happily drive the truck over you.”, says Amelia Davis, owner of Jim Marsall Photography LLC.
The portrait of the photographer who lived and died like an autentic rockstar that shows us his work and some of the most important moments in music. (Helena César)
Slices of city life, mechanical rhythms and flickering shadows make up the specular portraits of Simon Liu. Now, the plasticity of his 16mm camera (which sometimes blurs the images, sometimes reveals them in the porosity of analogue film, in a slow motion – creating poetic visual cadences), is accompanied by a sound composition that accentuates the human circulation in Hong Kong and the incommunicability in a metropolis. “Signal 8” discovers its political unrest in the picturesque dimension of a territory. (Ricardo Vieira Lisboa)
Imagine a world without sound. Imagine at least that, as in our world, it was not the momentary absence of sound that defined it. This is how SOA challenges us: the ubiquity of sound, from the simplest human activity today to the oldest proof of the existence of life. After all, if God dictated let there be light, the sound of His voice would have preceded it. SOA is a journey of questioning about the heterogeneity of sound and, along with the geography of human complexity, about its itinerancies – and our ability to listen to it. (Filipa Henriques)