I was born in Brussels and I bear a Flemish name. Yet, when I realized I lived my back turned on Flemish culture and language, I decided to learn Dutch. And, I left for Antwerp in search of that other me who also belongs to my history: a playful expedition unfolds itself far from Belgium's community controversies; a poetical quest for my native soil.
Belgium
71 Archival description results for Belgium
Like a puzzle, this film works on different elements: a guided tour in the waste lands of three cities (Brussels, Hamburg, Roma), a documentary about stray cats and the people who food it, some choreography of daily gesture, a question about cartography (and the common using of space), like a “wink” about the human Order and Chaos... and a statement on the present difficulties of the Inutility!
UntitledThis documentary moves between two poles: -A westerner arrives from a distant country, bringing souvenirs and fugitive thoughts.-A man with no official documents talks with humour about his odyssey.
"In 1996, I was staying in the village of Mankien in South Sudan to film the war which was taking place. At the time, I thought that making a film about an area struggling with such a severe conflict would almost have to be an act of duty. Once there, the reality appeared completely different from what I initially imagined it would be. The war that was all around me was not only a struggle between an oppressive government and a downtrodden minority but a latent conflict driven by power and economic interests. Back in Belgium, I felt overwhelmed by a strong feeling of helplessness and disillusionment to the point of never showing these images, up to now. A short while ago, I was told that the village of Mankien had been subjected to a massacre orchestrated by the Khartoum government with more than the slight complicity of Western oil companies. Closed District is not only a film about the war in South Sudan, but more about wars in general, about the death and distress that often ensues. It also raises the question of the filmmaker's place in a situation of conflict". (Pierre-Yves Vandeweerd)
UntitledRomantic waterfalls, rapids, blue mountains...
Counterpoint is a video installation I made from a poem by Mahmoud Darwish, who draws a portrait of Edward Said. I staged setting the poem, two faces of the same person in a black space. I wanted that the faces become separated from the space they float in.
Through the fate of two Samoan fa'afafine (« transvestites »), the film evokes a certain distance to the world, between contemplation and renouncement. This attitude finds itself in correspondance with that, enigmatic, of a young girl who lives at the end of a remote village. The directors invites us here to an impressionistic rediscovery of the ancient myth of Daphne's metamorphosis in the polynesian context.
There is a parallel world, Venice, clouds and karaoke. Birds of war.
Women who talk about men. Women who accidental happen to be prostitutes. The men are their lovers, clients, true love. But also a father, a son, a shopkeeper from around the corner or a passer-by. Un unexpected open and warm look behind the scenes of the bright neon light windows of the prostitute neighbourhood in Brussels. Stories about routine, but also unexpected tenderness, waiting, burning desire and intimacy.
Stock images of hijackings, political turbulence.