Geneviève Hamon

Geneviève Hamon

Perfil

Geneviève Hamon

Filmes

Energy and Dynamics of Photons
Director
Acera, or the Witches' Dance
Director of Photography
Em terrenos alagadiços ao longo da costa da Bretanha, observamos pequenos moluscos redondos com cerca de cinco centímetros de diâmetro.
Acera, or the Witches' Dance
Producer
Em terrenos alagadiços ao longo da costa da Bretanha, observamos pequenos moluscos redondos com cerca de cinco centímetros de diâmetro.
Acera, or the Witches' Dance
Director
Em terrenos alagadiços ao longo da costa da Bretanha, observamos pequenos moluscos redondos com cerca de cinco centímetros de diâmetro.
Diatoms
Director
The one-celled long and slender diatom, up close: discovered in 1703 with the invention of the microscope. We observe them magnified 10,000 times: water expelled through the skeleton, mucilage constantly emitted, allowing it to glide. Their energy comes from sunlight. They divide and disperse. The narrator, conversing with a young woman, says their remains cover one-third of the earth's surface. They have uses in petroleum, explosives, and polish. Some live in isolation, some in colonies, like elaborate fans. They can move in clusters. Many small animals eat them. We watch them slide on each other in long strings.
THE LOVE LIFE OF THE OCTOPUS
Director
A graça e fluidez de um abraço de oito braços, o olhar sedoso de um olho estranhamente bulboso. Entre os filmes mais mágicos já feitos, este é o retrato carinhoso de Painlevé sobre a criatura marinha anômala. A trilha sonora surpreendente é do pioneiro da música eletrônica, Pierre Henry.
Shrimp Stories
Director of Photography
Depois de uma introdução cômica, observamos atentamente um camarão e seu processo de digestão.
Shrimp Stories
Producer
Depois de uma introdução cômica, observamos atentamente um camarão e seu processo de digestão.
Shrimp Stories
Director
Depois de uma introdução cômica, observamos atentamente um camarão e seu processo de digestão.
How Some Jellyfish Are Born
Director
At a marine biology station, a clump of algae reveals polyps, stomachs with limbs, limbs with buds, buds with poison cells. This animal reproduces by buds, which we watch close up in time-lapse images. In another kind of jellyfish, the buds grow inside then live outside for a few days until being on their own. Another produces eggs, sometimes self-fertilized. Some single eggs become buds with colonies. Another clump gathered at low tide consists of filaments of a colony - plumes with poison ends. In images taking 72 hours, we see filaments grow and produce a feeding organ from which a plume emerges. New jellyfish emerge from buds twice a day at set times to form a new colonies.
Sea Ballerinas
Editor
Two kinds of starfish, the brittle and the feather. The brittle star moves its arms alone, without the aid of suckers. Underneath is a single opening. Stalks move food close to the mouth and move waste away. We see vents, used in reproduction and breathing. We watch the hatched young expelled into the water. The camera shows us brittle stars' intricate patters. We observe feather stars in clusters, like ferns. One turns over slowly; arms have branches with stalks for breathing and gathering microscopic food. Reproductive organs are inside branches. We see eggs develop at 1,400 nature's speed. Larvae emerge, 0.1 mm long. They grow. A feather star takes a walk.
Sea Ballerinas
Director of Photography
Two kinds of starfish, the brittle and the feather. The brittle star moves its arms alone, without the aid of suckers. Underneath is a single opening. Stalks move food close to the mouth and move waste away. We see vents, used in reproduction and breathing. We watch the hatched young expelled into the water. The camera shows us brittle stars' intricate patters. We observe feather stars in clusters, like ferns. One turns over slowly; arms have branches with stalks for breathing and gathering microscopic food. Reproductive organs are inside branches. We see eggs develop at 1,400 nature's speed. Larvae emerge, 0.1 mm long. They grow. A feather star takes a walk.
Sea Ballerinas
Director
Two kinds of starfish, the brittle and the feather. The brittle star moves its arms alone, without the aid of suckers. Underneath is a single opening. Stalks move food close to the mouth and move waste away. We see vents, used in reproduction and breathing. We watch the hatched young expelled into the water. The camera shows us brittle stars' intricate patters. We observe feather stars in clusters, like ferns. One turns over slowly; arms have branches with stalks for breathing and gathering microscopic food. Reproductive organs are inside branches. We see eggs develop at 1,400 nature's speed. Larvae emerge, 0.1 mm long. They grow. A feather star takes a walk.
Sea Urchins
Director
A complex creature. Regular underwater photography, magnified close-ups, and film through a microscope present sea urchins. We see their mouth and five teeth close and open. After injecting one with gelatin, the shell is removed and we see the muscle structure, digestive tube, and reproductive organs. Magnified stems reveal suction cups; stems lengthen and contract allowing the sea urchin to move. We see microscopic calcareous stems; at their ends are jaws with various uses. Cilia everywhere are in constant motion, stirring up water and debris. African music on the soundtrack suggests a shuffle dance.
Freshwater Assassins
Assistant Director
Em um lago de água doce, diversas criaturas aquáticas tentam comer outras para evitar que elas próprias sejam comidas.