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WELCOME > SCHEDULE > SCREENINGS > WELCOME TO THE DAILY CALM
HEART OF HAWICK
SATURDAY 29 APRIL
12:00 – 13:30 / 65′ + Q&A
Yoni Bentovim, Autojektor, Haneen Hadiy and Wendy Kirkup will be present for the Q&A.
The films in this programme have descriptive captions. The introduction and Q&A will have BSL interpretation.
Content warning: contains flashing imagery and sustained intense sound; discussion of displacement, colonialism, racism, sex, drug use; depiction of facial manipulation, war, tattooing, insects, childbirth.
PROGRAMME NOTES
by Luna Issa
In Welcome To The Daily Calm, ten films negotiate and navigate life’s cluttered desktops, its crowded frames, and the quiet chaos of its everyday routines.
In To Do, Saul Pankhurst playfully exhibits the challenges of proceeding through a mindfulness exercise without being overwhelmed by a comically cut-up collage of competing media and complementary thought-streams. Filming in the same spot each day for a year, Yoni Bentovim’s EXPIRED takes the ‘rubbish corner’ of a London estate as its structuring device, providing an ever-changing window into a life in which possession and occupation are constantly in flux.
Also using expired film stock, Chantal Partamian’s L’arbre powerfully compiles footage from Quebec and poetic prose from Beirut to reflect on the filmmaker’s own identity. In Jill, Uncredited, Anthony Ing celebrates ‘one of the world’s most prolific background actors’, taking time to centre on film and television extra Jill Goldston.
Autojektor’s robyn investigates the uneasy relationship between identity and technology, using the desktop as a kind of mirror and examining the extent to which a face can be distorted until it is no longer recognisable by AI. Identity is explored further in Jamal Ademola’s “Who Should I be in the World?”. Documentary, animation and live-action footage are blended to illustrate the fragmented and multiple cultural experiences of a Portuguese-speaking Angolan model who’s grown up in Montreal.
Haneen Hadiy’s The Distance Exists Between also explores notions of belonging and displacement. Using split-screen and sound that is almost dream-like, the filmmaker exhibits the tension in identity that comes with leaving one’s home country – in this instance, Iraq. Collage-like aesthetics continue in Angelo Madsen Minax’s Bigger on the Inside, in which the filmmaker combines images of desktop chatrooms, star-gazing and digital sketching to reflect on the possibilities of transness.
In a more hand-made style, Wendy Kirkup’s rough cut botanical uses a matte box to create multiple and simultaneous analogue images of animals and flora while a voiceover speaks to their materiality. In Before Iftar, Julie Halazy captures street scenes in Morocco a few minutes prior to the fast-breaking evening meal of Ramadan, presenting one take for each of its 28 days.
PROGRAMME
TO DO
Saul Pankhurst
3’23 – UK – 2022
EXPIRED
Yoni Bentovim
8’30 – UK – 2023
L’ARBRE
Chantal Partamian
2’28 – Canada – 2022
JILL, UNCREDITED
Anthony Ing
18’20 – UK – 2022
ROBYN
Autojektor
3’21 – UK – 2021
“WHO SHOULD I BE IN THE WORLD?”
Jamal Ademola
2’32 – USA – 2021
THE DISTANCE EXISTS BETWEEN
Haneen Hadiy
4’14 – Iraq – 2021
BIGGER ON THE INSIDE
Angelo Madsen Minax
11’47 – USA – 2022
ROUGH CUT BOTANICAL
Wendy Kirkup
8’ – Scotland – 2022
BEFORE IFTAR
Julie Halazy
1’59 – France – 2022
Banner image: To Do, Saul Pankhurst, 2022
WELCOME > SCHEDULE > SCREENINGS > WELCOME TO THE DAILY CALM
Alchemy Film & Arts
Room 305
Heart of Hawick
Hawick
TD9 0AE
info@alchemyfilmandarts.org.uk
01450 367 352
Charity Number: SC042142
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