In Perinatal Dreaming: Understanding Country we find ourselves in the mind of an unborn child, and we experience birth and the subsequent connection to the outside world, all in a spiritual vision that reminds us of the possibilities of a shared consciousness. The film Address Unknown: Fukushima Now also returns to the collective past, reconstructing memories of a home destroyed by nuclear tragedy.
Another film working with recollection, although of a confused nature, is Emperor, which evokes a journey through the mind of a man with a neurological disorder. His daughter struggles to understand her father’s seemingly nonsensical babbling and the film pieces together a mosaic of lost memories and conflicting emotions. The excruciating loss of home is the subject of the stunning RAPTURE II – Portal, in which we find ourselves in a horror-filled loop of constantly passing through a dilapidated apartment that the narrator was forced to abandon as a result of the Russian occupation of Ukraine’s Donbass region.
The search for a fixed place in the world is also addressed in the poetic Murmuration, which uses a fairy-tale framework of an encounter with an underwater creature to bring a poignant insight into the experience of migrants crossing the sea with the vision of a better life in Europe.
The idea that it is possible to change an entire system through the sharing of experiences is conveyed in All I Know About Teacher Li, which tells the story of the activist initiative of a Chinese emigrant who helped to spark democratic protests in China through his online activities.