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ES ES-OVNI RSC-2923 · Item · 2007
Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

Atmospherical approach to the Reichstag Building, house of German parliament, through the eyes of two young cleaners with foreign background. Joao leads through the film, posing philosophical questions about work, society and politics. Nihat cleans meticulously letters of a text about the meaning of life, which are embedded into the foundation of the building, but he does not comprehend...

What to Do on a Date
ES ES-OVNI RSC-2670 · Item · 1950
Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

A high school senior learns how and where to ask a girl for a date, where to take her for a good time, and how to avoid spending too much money or being bored by commercialized amusements.

Untitled
What we did at Florennes
ES ES-OVNI RSC-2204 · Item · 2003
Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

On 7 September 2002, a group of activists travel from Brussels to Florennes. Their aim is to carry out a citizens' inspection of a GM field test site 1 km outside the town. Yet, from the moment they arrive in the village, nothing goes according to plan... This film documents a different kind of day out in the countryside: the first in the series of 'Genespotting' actions which were to spread across Europe in 2003. Inspired by the cinéma vérité 'experiments' of Jean Rouch and the diary films of Jonas Mekas, What we did at Florennes was shot in silent Super 8, and the soundtrack was composed several months after the event, using the memories of key participants.

ES ES-OVNI CTX-S013-SS007-0091 · Item · 2006
Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

What We Want, What We Believe is not a straight-forward documentary but more like a tapestry woven from fragments of cloth. As a whole, these fragments present a rich and provocative history, straight from the mouths of Panthers, their supporters, and even the agents charged with neutralizing them. This 12-hour features three films on the Black Panther Party and additional footage on their history and legacy.

Untitled
What Would It Mean To Win?
ES ES-OVNI CTX-S013-SS007-0068 · Item · 2008
Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

What Would It Mean To Win? was filmed on the blockades at the G8 summit in Heiligendamm, Germany in June 2007. Begg and Ressler focus on the current state of the counter-globalisation movement. The film, which combines documentary footage, interviews, and animation sequences, is structured around three questions pertinent to the movement: “who are we?” “what is our power?” “what would it mean to win?".

Untitled
When Angels Lose Their Wings
ES ES-OVNI RSC-2181 · Item · 2007
Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

A terrestrial monument to the spirit of those who have touched the sun. Blossoming from the dense foliage of an old growth forest, the moving image of a remembered film expresses an inner landscape, a fluid and indeterminate space of love and loss. Fluctuations in luminosity redefine bodies and textures in a liminal zone of emotion and memory.

Where is my tribe?
ES ES-OVNI DIF-S005 · Series · 2016
Part of Non-Identified Video Observatory (OVNI)

Theory and practice of care

"Loneliness is on the rise. "Mainstream discourse hides the fact that the ‘normal’ situation of a 40-hour working week, plus daycare, plus grandma for tricky times, does not just leave room for improvement, it is downright unacceptable.”

Carolina del Olmo, where is my tribe?

In Sweden – an extreme case of Western trends within the Protestant tradition –, over 50% of the population live alone. People also die alone, forgotten by everyone, after a lifetime of pursuing the desire for personal independence, adapting to social norms, comforts, and socialisation without physical contact. The dream of an independent life, free from community bonds and patriarchal family ties, has turned out to be a nightmare of loneliness, sadness, and existential emptiness.

We need to overcome the binary oppositions that lead us to choose between two almost equally bad options. We don’t have to go back to the old, strictly patriarchal family, but we shouldn’t have to settle for metropolitan solitude either. The idea is to create and experiment with other ways of living and loving.

"According to anthropologist and primatologist Sarah Blaffer Hrdy, female lab rats locked in cages with only their young for company started to behave in a manner very similar to 1950s American housewives, with their obsessions and their neuroses. But when observed in the wild, mothers and their offspring showed a wide range of different behaviours in all kinds of social contexts."

                                                                                                                                                             Carolina del Olmo, Where is My Tribe ?

In the documentary The Swedish Theory of Love , a Swedish social worker investigating the growing number of people who die abandoned, completely isolated, asks: “What does it matter if I have a million in the bank if I am not happy?” But it’s not just about achieving happiness, it’s about the immense somnambulant sadness washing over a decaying civilization, where life unfolds in the midst of the epiphany of a mountain of waste. “ Did you hear that? It is the sound of your world collapsing ,” say the Zapatistas. Individual independence is the catastrophic ideal of a world that is perfectly organised and efficient but cold as ice.

“ At the end of independence there is no happiness. At the end of independence there is the emptiness of life, the insignificance of life, and utter, unimaginable boredom.”

                                                                                                                       Zygmunt Bauman, interviewed in The Swedish Theory of Love