A utopia of consumerism in which we are reduced to our tastes and characteristics so that we are better sold what we (don’t?) want.
Secção: Silvestre Focus
A video composed of sound and visual sampling of news from around the world, made in collaboration with Painè Cuadrelli.
A Japanese avant-garde film that is a poem-made-cinema for its use of surrealist imagery, presenting a sensual look at the human body.
Žižek speaks, but his image is deconstructed until nothing, or everything, makes sense.
An appropriation-of-an-appropriation of videos from Instagram, YouTube, video games and public archives that (re)compose wrecked memories.
An exploration of the identity of the woman as a lesbian, which mixes the materiality of the film with the tangibility of the female body, creating an aesthetic of its own.
In liberative fashion, or apotheotic exorcism, a collage of moments of male sexual pleasure.
Among domestic animals, a month is spent in the countryside, in the south of France. A group of friends rents a house and enjoy the summer.
Michael Brynntrup’s first internet-related film is a one-minute ode to rhythm in the age of reproducibility. Would Walter Benjamin approve?
The strange sexualization of a singing dog in a children’s film, in a film investigation set to a song by Colette Renard.
The body of a woman dancing, machinery at work and the sensuality of the increasingly abstract shapes on the screen.
In a reference to Kenneth Anger’s Fireworks, an erotic movement is created between pre-existing and filmed images, with an amorous language, a dialectic of nakedness, heavy breathing and surrender of the body.
Images from Jean Genet’s Un Chant d’Amour are interspersed with images of sexual scenes between men, raising questions about subversion and taboos.
Filmed on a mobile phone, an application tries to translate signs from French to English and is mercilessly confused.
The director does what she wants with her vagina in Solitary Acts #4.
A deep zoom shot that plays with the definitions of sexe (sex or sexual organ) and thym (thyme), which rhymes with the English word time, creating a game with words and images.
In the slot machine of capitalism, it’s not things but consumption itself that is our god.
A woman and her double in a caressing game.