Showing posts with label Bela Tarr. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bela Tarr. Show all posts

Sunday, 23 February 2020

Two Bosnian films, Murmurs and Epizoda ?, now online

The online availability of two of the Institute's Bosnian-made pictures has shifted dramatically in the past few weeks.

Epizoda ? can now be watched for free on Vimeo. This absurdist detective show pilot was written and directed by Graeme Cole at Béla Tarr's film.factory, and was previously available for VoD on Tao Films, an art film and 'slow cinema' platform, which is currently enjoying a creative pause.

Murmurs is available online for the first time, to rent or buy on Vimeo On Demand. The ASMR-tinged experimental feature film was also written and directed by Mr Cole at film.factory, and just like Epizoda ?, features Elma Selman in a leading role. The male lead is the Institute's regular player, Stewart Lockwood.


Epizoda ?

Video | 39'09" | BiH/UK | 2016
Cast
Vladimir Kajević
Elma Selman

A TV detective who's lost the plot drives aimlessly around the city. Negotiating time and space seem achievable next to solving a murder in a factory, the only witness a robot with the ability to get under the skin with its only two programmed lines: “That interests me” and “What are you afraid of?”

Murmurs

Video | 72'42" | BiH/UK | 2015-2020
Cast
Elma Selman
Stewart Lockwood

Hana is an ASMR artist, creating intimate videos for millions of online followers – and she hasn’t left her house for 18 months. Ed is a remote security image analyst, and Hana’s first online hook-up. When Ed arrives at Hana’s home, they begin to nurture an awkward togetherness. But for these lonely weirdos, building trust might take more than endless days of cooking and fucking.

Saturday, 7 December 2019

The Curse of the Phantom Tympanum & From The Ground To The Stars in Dhaka

UNIVERSAL EAR: The Curse of the Phantom Tympanum will finally get out of Europe for a screening at the International Short & Independent Film Festival in Dhaka, Bangladesh. The Institute's friend and colleague Ghazi Alqudcy will present his experiences at Béla Tarr's film.factory along with a program of films from Bistrik7, the artist collective formed by the school's first generation of graduates. Along with Curse, Mr Cole has contributed From The Ground To The Stars - his episode of film.factory's Lost In Bosnia omnibus feature.

EVENT: UNIVERSAL EAR: The Curse of the Phantom Tympanum and From The Ground To The Stars at International Short & Independent Film Festival in Dhaka
PROGRAM: Introduction of film.factory  + Film Screening
WHERE: Central Public Library, Dhaka, Bangladesh
WHEN: Sunday 8th December, 2019, 15.00
COST: FREE

The Curse of the Phantom Tympanum


From The Ground To The Stars


Wednesday, 13 February 2019

Epizoda ? is now online via tao films


The Institute's 2016 absurdist detective movie - Epizoda ? - is available to watch online for the first time, streaming on tao films, an art movie platform "which specialises in previously undistributed independent and arthouse cinema from around the world."

Watch Epizoda ? online.

Mentored by Béla Tarr, with original music by Dino Santaleza of Croatian band Pridjevi, and starring Vladimir Kajević and Elma Selman, it was the first movie to be directed by the Institute's Graeme Cole while he studied at Mr Tarr's film.factory in Sarajevo, BiH.

Synopsis: A TV detective who's lost the plot drives aimlessly around the city. Negotiating time and space seem achievable next to solving a murder in a factory, the only witness a robot with the ability to get under the skin with its only two programmed lines: “That interests me” and “What are you afraid of?”

Epizoda ? premiered at Rencontres Bandits-Mages in Bourges, France, in 2016 and went on to play at L'Alternativa (Barcelona) and the Auteur Film Festival in Belgrade among others. Most recently, it showed on a looping VHS cassette during Mr Cole's solo exhibition at the Slow Short Film Festival in Mayfield, UK.

The film is accompanied, on tao films, by an interview with the director. Epizoda ? can be 'rented' for €4.99 for 72 hours, or you can take out a month's subscription for just €1 more - which the Institute recommends, since our colleague Aleksandra Niemczyk will present two new films on the site this month, in addition to the copious hard-to-see art movies the service already hosts.

Tuesday, 11 October 2016

Epizoda ? in Bourges

Epizoda ?, the new mid-length movie directed by the Institute's Graeme Cole, will have its world premiere at Rencontres Bandits-Mages 2016, in Bourges, France on November 7th.

Further, upon selection Mr Cole was invited to complete a 'carte blanche' of complementary movies, and thus the program will also feature films by the great Kaori Oda (Thus A Noise Speaks) and Ghazi Alqudcy (My Parents Are Animals). The event also prefigures an artistic residency as part of the EMARE program to take place in early 2017.

Epizoda ? is the first film to be completed by Mr Cole under the mentorship of Béla Tarr at the latter's film.factory in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is an absurdist detective movie following the disintegration of a fictional murder cop to whom the basic procedures of crime investigation remain, themselves, a mystery.

EVENT: Epizoda ? at Rencontres Bandits-Mages 2016
PROGRAM: Soirée Carte Blanche À Graeme Cole
WHERE: UCL Cinéma MCB°, Boulevard Georges Clemenceau, 18000 Bourges
WHEN: Monday, 7th November 2016, 21.00
COST: Enquire at venue.

Friday, 1 April 2016

Unfound Peoples Videotechnic at Kino Klub Split: Mr. Cole's new residency

This April, Institute co-founder Graeme Cole will hold an artist’s residency at Kino Klub Split in Croatia, supported by Arts Council England.

Mr. Cole will be introduced to local artists and institutions, and create new film and video works in the context of the rich culture of experimental film and video work of the former Yugoslavia region. He will also hold a series of free workshops for local film and video artists.

During the residency, Mr, Cole will research the structure and function of the Kino Klub model and use his findings to construct a program of workshops and resources to explore the language of artist’s moving image in the age of the ubiquitous lens. This aspect of the project will be developed into an itinerant absurdist filmmaking academy, hereby known as the Unfound Peoples Videotechnic.

Graeme Cole recently completed his MA in Filmmaking at Béla Tarr’s film.factory in Sarajevo, in neighbouring Bosnia & Herzegovina. He is an independent artist-filmmaker whose films have played at festivals all over the world. Working mainly with Super 8 and other consumer formats, Mr Cole’s films take the language of narrative-based genre movies and infect them with an absurdist sensibility. Meta-narratives and open-source laboratory work expand and re-categorize the parameters of his cardboard and fog universe.

Kino Klub Split was established in 1952 and its activity is recognized in public as one of the original entries in the history of Croatian non-professional, alternative, amateur cinematography. Kino Klub organizes weekly screenings and boasts a classical film school program covering audio-visual media, new media, copyright and amateur film and computer animation. The club cultivates an atmosphere conducive to creative growth, freedom of opinion and expression, and the conditions for free circulation and exchange of ideas and experiences.

Mr. Cole’s project is supported using public funding by the National Lottery through Arts Council England.

For more information on the April 2016 workshops and how to apply, please read on:
 


UNFOUND PEOPLES VIDEOTECHNIC presents
(Hrvatski)

UPV Videomaker’s Radical Deprogramming Program
“How to lose yourself, find yourself and lose yourself again.”

Artist-filmmaker Graeme Cole (UK) will hold a series of FREE interconnected filmmaking workshops during an artist’s residency at Kino Klub Split, April 2016.

The program is intended to reboot our assumptions and fetishize the tools and (im)possibilities of filmmaking in the context of the historic Kino Klub movement. Each workshop will consist of a lecture, creative exercises, discussion and screening.

Short filmmaking assignments in the form of audio-visual research will be set between workshops and reflected upon in class. The emphasis is on creating with the tools you have available (particularly camera phones and tablets), but Kino Klub will help facilitate filmmakers with other equipment where necessary. These assignments are intended to be completed as ‘homework’, but Mr Cole will be available for support where possible.

At the conclusion of the program, we will hold a presentation in which each participant will screen their work to an invited audience and we will preview Mr Cole’s residency project.

Local filmmakers and visual artists are invited to apply for the workshops, which may be most suitable for those who are just starting out or who have made a couple of films already. Please email a couple of lines explaining your experience and your interest in the program to graeme (at) zoomcitta dot co dot uk and include links to your work if possible. Alternatively, please contact Sunčica at Kino Klub on 0918965860 (Limited to 5 places).

Week 1 – Saturday 9th April
*Mythology of the Self *
There is no autobiography, only automythology.

This module looks at the personal voice of the filmmaker. Taking the genre of ‘essay film’ as a starting point, we will explore how the filmmaker relates to their surroundings and personal history, and how best to transform, disguise, exaggerate and lie about their feelings through art in order to reach more fundamental (and entertaining) truths.

Week 2 – Saturday 16th April
*Rotting the Image*
The odour of a film’s look.

All too often, lazy imagination, cinematography and post-production can result in a visual quality that posits dull or unmediated visuals as code for some kind of yawn-worthy ‘realism’. In this module, we will debate whether or not the moving image exists as an ‘object’ in the age of digital code, whether we should pretend it is anyway, and how it can be decomposed to evoke evocative new so-called realities.

Week 3 – Saturday 23rd April
*Something About Sound Design, Gardening & Mutants*
How to control sound, and how you can never control sound.

Admitting that sound is our enemy can be the first step towards learning to manipulate it against the audience. In this module, we will look at ways of artificially introducing sounds into the environment of our cowering images, and how to use alternative sound structures, associations and textures to infect the minds of unsuspecting ‘viewers’ through their ear-holes.

Week 4 – Sunday 1st May
*Setting Your Attitude In Stone*
Manifestoes, obstinacy & self-flagellation.

Every film needs a manifesto. You need a manifesto. Your wardrobe needs a manifesto. Your hairdresser requires precise instructions. This module will take a look at existing and implicit artistic manifestoes, and examine their power both as liberating tool and comforting straitjacket. Finally, we will categorize our own valuable faults and habits in the light of what we have discovered over previous weeks.

On weeks 1, 2 and 3 you are invited to join Mr Cole on Sundays to test our theories and collaborate on a new video work.



Saturday, 1 August 2015

Murmurs: a paranoid romance... with tingles

Excellent news: at last you can contribute financially to the Institute, as we have launched our first ever crowdfunding campaign. And if you can't or won't pay up, why not consider sharing our project with your social networks?

Here's the link you'll want to follow and/or spread: igg.me/at/murmursfilm

The movie was directed by the Institute's Mr Cole under the mentorship of the great Béla Tarr, and follows a 36 hour date between a reclusive ASMR superstar and a remote security image analyst with a metal plate in his head. Shot in Sarajevo on a miniscule budget, the crew just needs a bit of help from our audience to ease the movie through post-production, sound design and distribution.



Tuesday, 31 March 2015

From The Ground To The Stars (Lost In Bosnia) in Hong Kong

Lost In Bosnia, the omnibus movie made by 'young colleagues' of Béla Tarr including the Institute's Mr Cole (35), plays in Hong Kong this afternoon and again at the weekend.

WHEN: Tuesday, 31st March 2015, 17.15; Saturday, 4th April 2015, 19.30
COST: HK$65-75
NOTES: "Three years ago, after the Silver-Bear winning The Turin Horse (35th HKIFF), celebrated Hungarian auteur Béla Tarr announced his retirement. Instead, he went on to a new phase, directing a demanding film programme, the Film Factory at the Sarajevo Film Academy. Lost in Bosnia showcases the quests of eleven young filmmakers, from Japan to Mexico, to find their voices and styles under the guidance of a master who so richly chronicled Eastern Europe in the 20th century."


Monday, 24 November 2014

From The Ground To The Stars (Lost In Bosnia) in Singapore

Lost In Bosnia, the omnibus picture made by students of Béla Tarr's film.factory (including opening segment by the Institute's Mr Cole), continues an impressive festival run with its Asian premiere in Singapore this weekend.

EVENT: Lost In Bosnia
PROGRAM: Imagine
WHERE: National Museum of Singapore
WHEN: Sunday, 30th November 2014, 19.00 
COST: FREE

Saturday, 8 November 2014

From The Ground To The Stars (Lost In Bosnia) in Copenhagen

Bela Tarr-mentored omnibus movie Lost In Bosnia, with opening segment by our own Mr Cole, receives its international premiere at CPH:DOX in Denmark today.

EVENT: Lost In Bosnia
PROGRAM: TopDox
WHERE/WHEN:
Cinematket Copenhagen, Saturday 8th November 2014, 16.45
Vester Vov Vov Copenhagen, Thursday 13th November 2014, 21.15
COST: 85kr
NOTES: from the programme-

"It is said that anyone can make a film these days. It's just very few people who actually go out and make one! But under the artistic guidance of the master director Béla Tarr in connection with his latest project, 'film.factory', 11 young Bosnian filmmakers have made a collective film poem about filmmaking itself. 'Lost in Bosnia' burns with youthful energy and enthusiasm for the medium's still endless possibilities, but also with a new generation's yearning to create and define their own lives in the wake of the country's tumultuous history. Eleven chapters and eleven different takes on a present (and future), which is still taking shape. From personal and poetic moments to protest and politics. Not much more is needed than a cheap camera, a good idea and a sense of unpredictability to create a small piece of cinematic art - and to interpret reality in a cinematic form, signed by ones own creative fingerprint. 'Lost in Bosnia' is a collective poem about the very act of filmmaking at a critical, (film-)historical moment in time."


Tuesday, 12 August 2014

From The Ground To The Stars (Lost In Bosnia) in Sarajevo

Mr Cole has contributed the opening segment of a new omnibus movie made by the extended family of Béla Tarr's film.factory academy: Lost In Bosnia.

The movie was shot entirely on portable electronic devices and on the theme of filmmaking, with particular regard to the various creative and existential ponderings of film.factory's students and faculty. Mr Cole's short, From The Ground To The Stars, was made with the specific challenge: feature film.factory as a character. Like the other contributors, he was given 7 days to make his short and told to keep the project a secret from his peers.

Lost In Bosnia will premiere at the 20th Sarajevo Film Festival this weekend.

EVENT: Lost In Bosnia
PROGRAM: BH Film
WHERE: Multiplex Cinema City - Hall #5, Maršala Tita 26, Sarajevo BiH
WHEN: Sunday, 17th August 2014, 16.45
COST: 4KM (book online)
NOTES: Facebook event


Bosnia and Herzegovina, 2014, 95 min.

Directors: Graeme Cole, Kaori Oda, Manel Raga Raga, Namsuk Kim, Aleksandra Niemczyk, Grant Gulczynski, Fernando Nogari, Patrick Marshall, Sunčica Fradelić, Thierry Garrel, Ghazi Alqudcy

Producers: Ghazi Alqudcy, Grant Gulczynski