NHOW
Overzicht van films
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The Cinema Snowglobe
JD Beltran, Scott Minneman | USA | -
The inspiration for this innovative interface for watching short films clearly comes from the traditional snowglobe, revamped as an interactive sculpt -
Heraclitus (Installation)
Lenny Oosterwijk | 50' | Netherlands | World premiere
A river is a symbol of eternal motion. For years, Oosterwijk has been collecting almost abstract recordings of rivers. The music by Artvark SQ adds… -
Hotel Red Shoes
Lisa Spilliaert, Clara Spilliaert | 15' | Belgium | -
A traditional Japanese song and the Tokyo love hotel ‘Red Shoes’ inspired an artist duo to create a performance video on ritualised desire. -
Narbe Deutschland
Burkhard von Harder | 967' | Germany | European premiere
A hallucinatory, sixteen-hour flight above the zone that for decades bisected the world: the entire length of the Iron Curtain: 1,378 kilometers. -
Pan
Anton Ginzburg | 6' | USA | None
A beautiful Islamic location with typical mosaics is the starting point for a muted investigation of the materiality of film versus video images. -
Philosopher’s Walk on the Sublime
Leslie Thornton | 16' | USA | European premiere
During a serious mountain hike, a group of intellectuals debate the concept of the sublime. When words fail, the camera comes to the rescue. -
Second Sighted
Deborah Stratman | 5' | USA | International premiere
Stratman selected a pretty heterogeneous set of documentary images from the vaults of the Chicago Film Archives, combining them to form a suggestive l -
See You Later/Au revoir
Michael Snow | 18' | Canada | None
A boss says goodbye to his secretary and leaves the office: what normally takes only a few seconds, is slowed down to a play lasting… -
Unmanned Distances
Bertrand Flanet | 9' | Canada | None
While keeping in touch by phone, two protagonists live in visually completely distinct universes. One is a drone pilot, the other works in an office. -
The Visitor
Rachel Monosov | 15' | Belgium | World premiere
Exploring the timeless landscape of the Judean desert like a lost space-traveller, a woman examines plants and animals. Synthetic sounds defy all logi