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Imagina

Imagina
Official Selection - Competition Official Selection - Out of Competition East of the West - Competition Forum of Independents - Competition Documentary Films - Competition Special Events Horizons Another View Imagina Variety Critics’ Choice Midnight Screenings Czech Films 2014–2015 Documentary Films - Out of Competition Tribute to Larisa Shepitko A Week of Lebanese Cinema Six Close Encounters Out of the Past Future Frames: Ten New Filmmakers To Follow Prague Short Film Festival Presents
Archive of 50th KVIFF
Am I Dreaming of Others, Or Are Others Dreaming of Me?
(Am I Dreaming of Others, Or Are Others Dreaming of Me?)
Directed by: Shigeo Arikawa / Japan, Netherlands, 2014, 11 min

Dreams often take on a very concrete form, and yet capturing them on film is incredibly tricky. In Shigeo Arikawa’s imaginative world, a geometric and yet absolutely unpredictable surrealistic vision materializes into a disturbing and, at the same time, alluring form.

Back Track
(Back Track)
Directed by: Virgil Widrich / Austria, 2015, 7 min

Twenty-five old movies, three men under the spell of one woman, and 3-D. Oscar nominee Virgil Widrich has created a precise and playful noir mystery that also serves as a tribute to period cinematography while simultaneously reconstructing it into a form that distorts the boundaries of the cinematic illusion. Whoever said that experimental film can’t be hedonistic?

The Forbidden Room
(The Forbidden Room)
Directed by: Guy Maddin, Evan Johnson / Canada, 2015, 128 min

Do you know how to take a bath properly? And did you know that when a submarine starts running out of air you can get oxygen from pancake bubbles? In his latest phantasmagoric offering, Guy Maddin (aided by Geraldine Chaplin and Udo Kier) demonstrates the indefatigability of his imagination while reinvigorating the spirit of movies that once existed but have been lost forever.

Lost Case
(Ztracený případ)
Directed by: Roman Štětina / Czech Republic, 2014, 58 min

This compilation film by Jindřich Chalupecký Award-winner Roman Štětina employes scenes from the cult series “Columbo” to create an entirely new story that highlights moments we would not have expected from the original. Columbo’s lost case is, at the same time, the one which gives the celebrated detective the most gray hair and wrinkles.

Lucifer
(Lucifer)
Directed by: Gust Van den Berghe / Belgium, Mexico, 2014, 108 min

The Morning Star turns up in a remote Mexican village, intent on helping people. But could this change come from on high? In this final part of his trilogy – another original work – Gust Van den Berghe looks to notions of an earthly paradise, using an entirely new film format to portray it. Might the boundaries of the spiritual world be in the shape of a circle?

natural history
(natural history)
Directed by: James Benning / USA, Austria, 2014, 77 min

A somewhat different kind of excursion to Vienna’s Museum of Natural History that doesn’t urge us to view the exhibits with a sense of wonder. Forty-five engaging but essentially common static shots encourage us instead to revise our perception of the film image and the way we look at history.

Nipomo
(Nipomo)
Directed by: Marek Partyš / Czech Republic, 2015, 5 min

Dva is an unrelentingly imaginative Czech band. Nipomo is the name of their successful album and also of the inspired and playful song chosen by Marek Partyš for his first music video, which won Best LoFi at the Berlin Music Video Awards.

The Old Jewish Cemetery
(The Old Jewish Cemetery)
Directed by: Sergei Loznitsa / Netherlands, Latvia, 2014, 20 min

A tram crisscrosses through the streets, kids play on the grass, the cemetery is devoid of markers. This unostentatious film, concisely capturing the mood of an intriguing site, ushers the viewer into a world ruled over by the stark atemporality of a place of burial from before the Second World War.

Orgy of the Devil and Other Forbidden Tapes of Ivan Cardoso
(O bacanal do diabo e outras fitas proibidas de Ivan Cardoso)
Directed by: Ivan Cardoso / Brazil, 2013, 62 min

Ivan Cardoso is an icon of Brazilian underground film whose works shy away from neither nudity nor the macabre, and his creations have never subscribed to the notion of high or low art. In a compilation film that sums up his rich career, a notion stands out that entertainment was never more intense and unscrupulous, and yet, at its core, benign.

oV
(oV)
Directed by: Martin Blažíček / Czech Republic, Hungary, 2014, 6 min

Foggy memories of a French nightclub from the mid-20th century; glitchy stuttering electronic music by Lanuk, 2014. A video edited in real time by a leading Czech experimenter which revitalizes the voyeuristic nature of the film image.

A Purpose
(A Purpose)
Directed by: Luca Dipierro / Italy, USA, 2015, 3 min

Father? – Yes, son! Father Murphy are the crown princes of the Italian psychedelic scene. Luca Dipierro is an artist working in cutout animation. This is his vision of the crucifixion as mediated by the hypnotic eponymous composition from the band’s album Croce.

San Siro
(San Siro)
Directed by: Yuri Ancarani / Italy, 2014, 26 min

Penetrating the bowels of the monster isn’t easy but this film anatomy of the renowned Milan stadium succeeded in doing just that. Although the roar of the match wafts in from a distance, this elegantly concise film brings to life the magic of a fascinating place dedicated to a ritual with today’s greatest mass appeal.

Sleeping District
(Sleeping District)
Directed by: Tinne Zenner / Denmark, Russia, 2014, 12 min

A silent film that speaks with eloquence. Composed into attractive images, this excursion to the empty apartments of Moscow’s enormous prefab housing complexes invites us to contemplate the things that form our memories of the places in which we live.

THE
(THE)
Directed by: Billy Roisz, Dieter Kovacic / Austria, 2015, 13 min

Although entirely abstract, even this horror film employs suspense and shock to upset our equanimity. This time, a mysterious epidemic isn’t out to annihilate humanity, but the film itself. The horror approaches. But from where? The terrifying sounds will provide a clue.…

Things
(Things)
Directed by: Ben Rivers / United Kingdom, 2014, 20 min

Each season of the year ushers in a different mood, the nature of which leading British experimenter Ben Rivers investigates in his latest, highly personal film. Although some of its images seem to have come from another world, their essence reveals something universal.

Twelve Tales Told
(Twelve Tales Told)
Directed by: Johann Lurf / Austria, 2014, 4 min

Every Hollywood film starts with the trailer of the studio that made it. With mathematical precision, this four-minute 3-D deconstruction of grandiosity edits together 12 of these iconic intros to demonstrate that the stories from these dream factories can also be written by the factories themselves.

Vanishing Circuit
(Shoushitsusuru Kairo)
Directed by: Shunsuke Hasegawa / Japan, 2014, 13 min

This dreamlike movie, created under the influence of Chris Marker’s legendary film La jetée (1962), introduces a man who begins to perceive the world through the eyes of a complete stranger. This fragile cinematic poem takes us to the Japanese metropolis, traversing it with a perception that is both pacifying and provocative.

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