15 Days
A camera-shy film journalist decides to inflict an experiment on himself: to film himself for 15 days. Halfway through his ordeal he opens up.
90'
Japan
IFFR 2020
Forcing himself to confront his own 16mm camera each day for over two weeks, Suzuki Shiroyasu initially seems to regret his own idea and indulges in very recalcitrant behaviour. Not until halfway through the project does he address the camera more candidly and start to question his own identity, as well as his relationships with his own milieu and other social structures.
The result is a paradoxical combination of an intimate portrait and a seriously disciplined investigation into the properties of the medium itself. As a result, 15 Days illustrates two tendencies typical of 1970s Japanese experimental film: structuralist investigation and the cinema of privacy. On the one hand, the ambition is to reflect on the extraordinary spatio-temporal sensation that only the cinema viewing experience can produce. On the other hand, the film allows us to peek into his personal life as a poet, critic, filmmaker and husband who systematically works late at night.
IFFR 2020
Programme IFFR 2020
Waiting for a film to start, it has already begun – in our mind. This programme cultivates the viewer’s patience, both in the cinema and outside.
Read more about this programmeA camera-shy film journalist decides to inflict an experiment on himself: to film himself for 15 days. Halfway through his ordeal he opens up.
90'
Japan
IFFR 2020
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IFFR 2020
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IFFR 2020