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Schein sein (Seems to Be)
Retour au catalogue 2008 | Fiction - Short film

Schein sein (Seems to Be)

Bady Minck
Année de sortie au Luxembourg 2008
Année de sortie au Luxembourg 2008
Réalisateur Bady Minck
Producteur Luxembourgeois AMOUR FOU LUXEMBOURG
En coproduction avec
  • Amour Fou Vienna (AT)
  • Innovative Film Austria (AT)
  • ORF (AT)
  • KGP (AT)
Script Patrick Ridremont, Jean-Sébastien Lopez, Bady Minck
Version originale
  • without dialogues
Durée 8 minutes
Ventes internationales

Sixpack Films

Lightcone

Cast and crew
Cast

    Morton Feldman, Beat Furrer, Musicians of Klangforum Wien

Crew

    DOP: Martin Putz, Eni Brandner
    Editor: Frédéric Fichefet
    Music: Morton Feldman
    Orchestra: Klangforum Wien

Synopsis

Based on Morton Feldman’s "Madame Press Died Last Week at Ninety", Seems To Be plays with the levels of optic and aural perception, with the deception of eyes and ears as well as the tension between two-dimensional reproduction and three-dimensional spatial recreation.

Accompanied by murmuring, the sound of scribbling and hummed snatches of music, the camera sweeps over a collection of materials on a desktop, seemingly reflecting a creative frenzy. Musical notes and memoranda, pads and pencils, patterns of various kinds, mixed with slips of paper, half-full Martini glasses, ashtrays, death’s heads—then the picture swings around (the coffee cup along with it!) and an ensemble arranged according to musical instrument has been committed to paper. Constant movement, metamorphosis, variation and pleasant uncertainty: a concert hall? A movie theater?
The picture’s square remains, becoming in the course of the switch a bright square within the picture: a projection screen with an ensemble in the form of a projection screen in front of the ensemble, which is suddenly no more than a shadow of itself. Madame Press is dead. The imagination lives on. At least that seems to be the case.
Christoph Huber

A meditation on the certainties of being and perceptual illusions, a circling search in time and space, and at the same time a trompe l’oeil; the spatial dimensions of Morton Feldman’s steady, apparently timeless music are taken literally in the film: The sketched arrangement of a musical ensemble about to perform Feldman’s composition fills with ‘real’ musicians caught in the paper’s two-dimensionality, only to move to the spatiality of the Vienna Konzerthaus. But what is real here, what is a visual fake? Seems To Be dances on this platform of ambivalences, juxtaposing the metaphysics of a solid existential foundation and the agnostic skepticism of an abandonment of being marked by a visual chimera. Godless Feldman, merciless abyss! What we see is looking back at us.

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