PROGRAM/6


»This is me.«
40 min / 21th May / ACUD Cinema
20:45-21:25h

Inhabiting the interstitial space between film and its various others this corpus of works resonates with illusionary concepts such as social identity, codified cultural roles and subjective authenticity by exploring both physical and virtual traces of the real. Recurring patterns reveal the arbitrariness and the absurd nature of self-reflection and of the attempt to capture the ephemeral in order to defeat time and to halt decline. Stuttering, spasms, compulsive repetitions and automatic behaviour, a disjunction between bodily and verbal communication not only undermine the notion of intentionality but also demonstrate the fragility and loneliness of technologically mediated social identities.


Confident
Miguel Seabra Lopes & Karen Akerman
12 min/ 2016 / Portugal, Brazil / German premiere


This is me.


Where is Eva Hipsey ?
Orla Mc Hardy
8 min/ 2016 / Ireland / World premiere


An experimental animation that is centred around an intrepid, older woman dealing with the reality of aging in a poetically practical way. The film deals with ideas that are elusive and subtle; subjective truth, memory and letting go, capturing beauty, growing old and finally disappearance."


Exclusion Zone
Alexander Isaenko
9 min / 2015 / Ukraine , Russia / German premiere


Few years ago Sergey from Krasnodar created a YouTube channel. He documents his different moods with the small camera, shares his online notes, mainly when he is visiting his country cottage area. Sometimes after mowing the grass he clearly sees that he belongs to the scientific community.


RECKONING 4
Kent Lambert
10 min / 2016 / USA / International premiere


»RECKONING 4 is the second in a series of investigations into (among other things)
1. Terror and wonder in big-budget virtual worlds
2. The fluidity, fragility and loneliness of technologically mediated social identities and friendships
3. The queerness and malevolence of archetypal masculinity
4. The poetics of blockbuster aesthetics

By the time I started actively editing RECKONING 4, my ambivalence about video games had deepened in multiple directions. I couldn’t deny the escapist pleasure I often took from my game sessions, particularly during professional and personal crises. That pleasure was tempered by the tedium of staging, capturing, transcoding and organizing footage from these sessions, and soured by the casual misogyny that permeated so many popular games and the culture surrounding them. So I looked to podcasts hosted by prominent video game journalists for non-male voices, for critical and feminist discourse on game culture, and I engaged in dialogue with several students I worked with about the pleasures, perils, and unexplored artistic possibilities of video game forms. One of these students, Bryce, agreed to an interview with me (via headset chat) after his own ambivalence brought him to a turning point. He realized that he’d essentially become addicted to video games, to the detriment of his studies and overall well-being. We spoke for several hours and played what he’d decided would be his last game session before selling his console. Our conversation figures prominently in this piece and will presumably be woven into subsequent installments. RECKONING 4 also documents my first and only (so far) attempt to talk to strangers in an online multiplayer game.

If RECKONING 3 represented cinema looking at video games (Michael Douglas wandering a marble-columned virtual reality corridor, Siskel and Ebert playing with an early infrared motion game controller, Hollywood leading men and game avatars composited via flicker editing), RECKONING 4 presents a fantasy in which figures from cinema, video games and the “real world” listen to and gaze at (or past) each other. TVs in video game apartments show me talking and listening to Bryce, a Nightline segment on the harassment of female gamers, and the hapless middle-aged gamer protagonist from RECKONING 3. Game scenes are revealed to be on screens in other scenes. Conventional cross-cutting and detailed sound design create the illusion of permeability between these realms, of “life” unfolding as channels and stations are restlessly changed, of continuous ennui occasionally interrupted by menace (Kevin Spacey as politician gamer and uncanny valley villain).

RECKONING 4 reflects on toxic masculinity and the dystopia of simulation. If you walk too close to the GTAV cop, he guns you down. You can pose your MGSV character in quasi-sexual positions with other soldiers, but you must first knock them out. “I get what I want, when I want it” says the billionaire to his wife. “I need something more, but what else is there?«