Nomotopowell explores the unnamed histories of lost settlements and human skulls around a village in Florida. Structured as a travelogue, and combining landscapes with abstracted archival texts and voices, the film summons the spirits that haunt a shape-shifting territory, reflecting a violent national residue without ever leaving the village.
Bernardo/Voltemand
In The Wooster Group’s HAMLET, Shakespeare’s classic tragedy is re-imagined by mixing and repurposing Richard Burton’s 1964 Broadway production, directed by John Gielgud. The Burton production was recorded in live performance from 17 camera angles and edited into a film that was shown as a special event for only two days in nearly 1,000 movie houses across the U.S. The idea of bringing a live theater experience to thousands of simultaneous viewers in different cities was trumpeted as a new form called “Theatrofilm,” made possible through “the miracle of Electronovision.” The Wooster Group attempts to reverse the process, reconstructing a hypothetical theater piece from the fragmentary evidence of the edited film. We channel the ghost of the legendary 1964 performance, descending into a kind of madness, intentionally replacing our own spirit with the spirit of another.
Director
A short documentary about a long-standing, now defunct video store in New York City's Chelsea neighborhood, Alan's Alley, and its charismatic owner, Alan Sklar, a human movie database.
Writer
아이를 안정적으로 키우지 않고 자신의 망가진 인생에 아이를 동참시키는 사라. 사라의 부모는 더이상 두고볼 수가 없어서 아이를 시골마을에 데려다 놓지만, 그곳에서도 아이는 고통받게 된다.