Arts and Entertainment
September 29, 2023
From: Imagine Science Film FestivalThe 16th Annual Science New Wave Festival
Imagine Science Films (ISF) hosts the Science New Wave Film Festival in New York since 2008. The festival takes place in diverse venues, including cinemas, universities and museums across the five boroughs of New York.
Every year, we select the latest crop of science cinema - doc, fiction, animation, video art, research scenes & hybridities of all types. We will present these works at the 16th Annual Science New Wave Festival that takes place in New York from October 20-27, 2023.
Our 16th Edition brings you 64 titles that explore our theme of the year: (art)ificial. Each film receives a SNW Certificate and will be eligible for the Science New Wave Awards.
2023 Symbiosis Participants
Announcement
6 scientists, 6 filmmakers, 6 soon-to-be new works from the Science New Wave.
A scientist will be paired with a filmmaker and make a film. All shorts will be developed, directed, produced and screened during the 8-day 16th Annual Science New Wave Festival from October 20 to 27 in New York city.
The Symbiosis initiative is supported by the Simons Foundation.
Science New Wave Awards
Every year, the Science New Wave selects sixty four films and showcases them at the New York-based Science New Wave Festival. These works propose a visionary look on how to bring science into film.
The 64 films have been completed in the last year and selected by our programming team. Each of these selected films will receive a Science New Wave Certificate.
Our selected films are eligible for several awards and cash prizes. Our SNW awards are voted by our Science New Wave Luminary Members.
Film Schedule
Friday, October 20
Day 1
7:00pm
Animalia
OPENING NIGHT FEATURE FILM
Cinema Village
Itto, a young woman from a modest rural background, is slowly adapting to the codes of Moroccan privilege with her husband's family. But when supernatural events put the country in a state of emergency, Itto finds herself separated from her husband and new family. Alone, pregnant and looking for her way back, amidst strange events and inscrutable messages from the natural world, she finds emancipation.
Animalia | Sofia Alaoui, 2023, Morocco / Qatar / France, 91 min
9:00pm
The Tuba Thieves
OPENING NIGHT FEATURE FILM
Cinema Village
A spate of robberies in Southern California schools had an oddly specific target: tubas. In this work of creative nonfiction, d/Deaf first-time feature director Alison O'Daniel presents the impact of these crimes from an unexpected angle. Blending documentary and fictionalized performances and set to an L.A. landscape/soundscape never quite seen before, this film explores a dimensional experience of deafness and reorients the audience auditorily in an unfamiliar and exhilarating way.
The Tuba Thieves is intended to be screened to mixed hearing, hard of hearing and d/Deaf audiences. In order to accommodate all of our audience members, this film always screens with Open Captions, and can also be experienced with Audio Descriptions.
The Tuba Thieves | Allison O'Daniel, 2023, United States, 91 min
Saturday, October 21
Day 2
1:00pm
Critical Soundscapes
SHORT FILM PROGRAM
Cinema Village
Three experiences of sound in film in troubled times: the crackle of threatened hemlocks, disaster as finely orchestrated dance in labs and greenhouses, and the rich but worrisomely diminishing sonic ecologies of birds. Inverting and extending the sonic (and silent) themes of opening night's The Tuba Thieves, here sound mediates climate, self, and unseen worlds.
"And when I die let me be buried in a Hemlock coffin, so I'll go through hell snapping." | Sarah Ema Friedland, 2023, United States, 8 min
HUBRIS | Jules de Niverville, 2023, Canada, 30 min
The Last of the Nightingales | Masha Karpoukhina, 2022, United States, 32 min
Total Run Time: 70 min
3:00pm
Uncanny Bodies
SHORT FILM PROGRAM
Cinema Village
Simulated citizens, cybernetic surgeons, and technologically-confused anatomies: these are the new residents of an increasingly automated, scanned, and digitized world. The films in this program race along the criss-crossing wires of our electronically-ersatz hyperpresent, from an Edenic garden swarming with generative textures, to the a place beneath the spotlights of the modeling world, where a full-body-scanned likeness offers an ambivalent escape from whirlwind shoots and constant travel. Elsewhere, in the near future, medical robotics seize a free moment to break for a game of chess.
Pink Noise | Martin Wiklund, Athrur Lemaitre & Ulysse Lefort, 2022, France, 2 min
E6-D7 | Eno Swinnen, 2023, Belgium, 16 min
Issues with my Other Half | Anna Vasof, 2022, Austria, 6 min
I Thought I Was Hearing Citizens | Manu Luksch & Mukul Patel, 2023, Austria, 6 min
Uncanny Me | Clementine Engler, 2022, Germany, 44 min
Total Running Time: 74 min
5:00pm
TerraForma + Bloom
FEATURE FILM PROGRAM
Cinema Village
TerraForma is the story of the remote volcanic island of Ascension, which sat smoldering for a million years largely devoid of life, until its radical transformation by process of 'terraforming' into a tropical paradise.
But there is more to this island than meets the eye. The Victorian naturalists who transformed this island reshaped the ecology to fit the political and economic demands of their society - but only at the expense of what existed before it. The new environment, seemingly a paradise, was in fact a mirage. A mirror image of their ambition, their empire, and their understanding of the world. And as such it was doomed to fail. Many believe that future plans to geo-engineer our planet, or terraform others, would simply follow the same pattern.
With the help of experts in the fields of geo-engineering, ecology, politics, and design, TerraForma explores the lessons we could learn from Ascension Island. And what its story may mean for our planet, in a future where terraformed landscapes and human-engineered environments may come to warp our understanding of 'nature' itself.
TerraForma | Laurence Durkin & Kevin Brennan, 2023, Ireland, 62 min
Preceded by:
San Borondón is a mythical island that appears and disappears. It has appeared on maps throughout history in the vicinity of the Canary Island. The legend of the island of San Borondón became so pervasive that, during the XVI, XVI and XVIII centuries, expeditions were organized to find and conquer it. After centuries of oblivion, it has finally been found.
Bloom | Helena Girón & Samuel M. Delgado, Spain, 2023, 18 min
7:00pm
Cyborg: A Documentary
FEATURE FILM
Cinema Village
Artist Neil Harbisson was born color blind, but an antenna drilled into his skull enables him to hear colors and today he is the world's first officially recognised cyborg. Meet a man who may be the prototype of the human of the future.
There are no others like Neil Harbisson out there – at least not yet. As the world's first officially recognised cyborg, he is a unique creature and on a dedicated mission for the right to design himself. Born color-blind, artist Harbisson has an antenna implanted in his skull that enables him to hear color and, along with his collaborators, he tours the world talking about being a cyborg. Unfortunately, not everyone shares Harbisson's tech-optimism, and he has faced death threats from conservative zealots who see the symbiosis between man and machine as blasphemous. A film from the technological forefront about a cyborg who may be the prototype of the human of the future.
Cyborg: A Documentary | Carey Born, 2023, Australia / Denmark / Spain / United Kingdom / United States, 87 min
8:00pm
Science New Wave Works-in-Progress / Field Notes
LIVE EVENT
DCTV Firehouse Cinema
Join us for an evening in celebration of artist-scientist collaboration, catch glimpses of new projects in the making, and share process on how we use 'field notes' in our filmmaking.
9:00pm
White Plastic Sky
FEATURE FILM
Cinema Village
In the near future, there are no more animals or plants on Earth and the remaining humans are living under a plastic dome. The price for their continuing survival is very high: at the age of 50, they are implanted with a special seed that turns them into a tree which will provide oxygen and food for the community. A young man, Stefan, accepts this system – until the day his wife Nóra decides to give up her life and undergo voluntary implantation. Driven by his love for her, Stefan decides to break the rules of society in order to save her.
Animation duo Tibor Bánóczki and Sarolta Szabó created their dystopian epic using rotoscoping techniques. The screenplay was developed with contributions from geologists, botanists and meteorologists, thus providing its fantasy-laden story with a solid, scientific grounding. A deeply moving eco-fantasy that deals head-on with the climate apocalypse threatening life on Earth, M?anyag égbolt is a film imbued with the melancholy of those most aware of how close humankind is to extinction. Although, as is the case for the couple at the center of this beguiling love story, this burden is lightened by their keen sense of the world's beauty.
White Plastic Sky | Tibor Bánóczki & Sarolta Szabó, 2023, Hungary, 111 min
Sunday, October 22
Day 3
1:00pm
Croma Kid
FAMILY FEATURE MATINEE
Cinema Village
Like many 13-year-olds, Emi is a little embarrassed by his mildly quirky parents and grandfather – sometimes he wishes they were bankers like ordinary people instead of magicians preparing to launch Croma Kid, their own TV show. Having grown up with a TV studio in the basement, Emi is a total tech-head and very well-versed in all the hottest audio-visual technology that 1993 has to offer. One day, while he's messing around with the chroma key machine that creates the effects of the magic show, it breaks. In his attempt to replace it, Emi comes across a device that just happens to open portals to other dimensions – and winds up transporting Mum and Dad somewhere else in the multiverse. Now, Emi has to put all his gearhead skills to use and do some manipulation of the past to bring them home.
Croma Kid | Pablo Chea, 2023, Dominican Republic, 92 min
3:00pm
Vacancies and Redundancies
SHORT FILM PROGRAM
Cinema Village
What dreams occupy the places we've left behind? In an abandoned gold mine, scientists search for evidence of dark matter, while in an empty school in Japan, sleep studies manifest even more unknowable forces. Meanwhile, our automated replacements milk cows, serve drinks, and patrol the streets of empty model cities. In the end, perhaps remaining useful, for an outmoded human, requires drastic measures.
Stillness of Labor | Chris Larson, 2023, United States, 9 min
Metabolism | Misho Antadze, 2023, The Netherlands, 12 min
Theta | Lawrence Lek, 2022, United Kingdom, 12 min
Waiting Space | Carin Leong, 2023, United States,12 min
Retrodreaming | Alisa Berger, 2022, Germany / Japan, 18 min
Human Resources | Trinidad Plass Caussade, Titouan Tillier, & Isaac Wenzek, 2023, France, 4 min
Total Run Time: 67 min
5:00pm
Cielo Abierto + Mulika
FEATURE FILM PROGRAM
Cinema Village
A Peruvian father labors patiently, chipping at the white volcanic stone that forms an extraordinary landscape. His son is part of the modern world: he uses cameras and drones in order to create the digital model of a church on a computer. Separated by the mysterious death of the wife/mother figure in the family, these men do not connect. And yet their paths cross in a ghostly manner, as do their professions: each in their own way works with textures and volumes, sensations and perceptions. Can the realm of digital art recreate and revivify the old world? Can it also awaken hearts grown lonely and cold?
Cielo Abierto | Felie Esperza, 2023, Chile, 65 min
Preceded by:
An "afronaut" emerges from the wreckage of his spaceship in the volcanic crater of Mount Nyiragongo. As he encounters the people of present-day Goma in the city, he begins to understand how to change the future for his people.
Mulika | Maisha Maene, 2022, Democratic Republic of the Congo, 14 min
7:00pm
A Common Sequence + Ecstasy
FEATURE FILM PROGRAM
Cinema Village
Within the human struggle to live and work, and with the materials for survival available for exploitation, seemingly foreign worlds are intertwined in the modern battlefield of patents, ownership, and colonialism. Delving into labor and science practices, A Common Sequence examines who gets to work with the essentials of life — saving animals from extinction, researching medicine, harvesting food, coding the genome — in our modern world controlled by data.
Filmmakers Mary Helena Clark and Mike Gibisser take us to the areas and people involved in these physical and political worlds with an intuitive visual style, letting the audience experience each location's atmosphere. Take the achoque salamander, which can regenerate limbs and even its heart, the intellectual property rights of apple trees, and the commodification of human DNA. The film eloquently guides us through the philosophy of what is "common" to everyone in nature and the complicated pursuits of owning materials of the planet and even our bodies, whether for conservation or for sale. The resulting discussion could change all our lives!
A Common Sequence | Mary Helena Clark & Mike Gibisser, 2023, United States, 80 min
Preceded by:
A mystical sci-fi based on Saint Teresa de Avila's writings. Inside a ghostly mausoleum that is an artifact of both the past, and future, these nuns are being affected by a black hole. Ecstasy is an eerie exploration of pleasure.
Ecstasy | Carolina Costa, 2023, Mexico, 8 min
9:00pm
Last Things + The Secret Garden
FEATURE FILM PROGRAM
Cinema Village
The human race is old, but rocks are timeless. Weaving stunning imagery with evocative text and interviews, Last Things observes the history of all of us and this planet Earth through the most essential parts — evolution and extinction, from the POV of rocks. The immensity of our existence is hard to fathom, and we are obsessed with our past, looking for reasons. A huge journey we should take on a cinema screen.
In a distinctive style seen throughout her long career, Deborah Stratman skillfully combines pure science with speculative fiction, not to give you an answer to the meaning of life, but to provide sounds, images, and ideas to contemplate. Using both microscopic and landscape photography, we see the luscious textures of rocks and matter and our handprints on it. Texts from writers enhance the journey, ranging from the creators of the science fiction genre to experts of stream-of-consciousness reflections. Stratman blurs the borders of poetry, narrative, and fact in an ethereal adventure. As one interviewee states, "Rocks have a history, but they don't remember it."
Last Things | Deborah Stratman, 2023, United States, 50 min
Preceded by:
The inhabitants of a city awake one morning to find that never-before-seen trees, plants, and flowers suddenly erupted throughout the streets and in the squares. Strange and mysterious events start taking place as Camelia and Nahla investigate the origins of these new and peculiar creatures.
The Secret Garden | Nour Ouayda, 2023, Lebanon, 27 min
Monday, October 23
Day 4
3:00pm
Unnatural Landscapes
SHORT FILM PROGRAM
Cinema Village
What are the representative landscapes of the Anthropocene? Here, workers labor to reclaim precious metals from vast landfills or cultivate flowers in toxic gardens, while researchers coax verdant life into existence amidst frigid snowfields to test the possibilities of photosynthesis in space. A triptych on our fabricated environment, whether planned or unplanned.
Terra Mater | Kantarama Gahigiri, 2023, Rwanda, 10 min
A field that no longer smells of flowers | César Flores Correa, 2023, Mexico, 19 min
The Antarctic Gardener | Elisa Strinna, 2023, The Netherlands, 24 min
Total Run Time: 53 min
5:00pm
The Visitors
FEATURE FILM
Cinema Village
A young anthropologist, Zdenka, moves with her husband and three sons to Svalbard, Norway, to study how life is changing in polar regions. She has received a prestigious two-year grant to carry out extensive research on the impact of globalizationglobalization on the inhabitants of the world's northernmost town, Longyearbyen. After falling in love with her new home, Zdenka discovers that more than icebergs and permafrost are vanishing in the Arctic. Through conducting interviews with residents, she begins to perceive how heterogeneous the small local community actually is, while also revealing tensions that lie beneath the surface. Zdenka then has to work out the extent to which she can get involved in the local community that she only originally intended to observe.
The Visitors | Veronika Lišková, 2022, Czech Republic, 83 min
6:30pm
Symbiosis Lab Meeting
LIVE EVENT
Caveat
Join us for an intimate glimpse into the Sci-Art collaboration process with this year's six Symbiosis teams!
7:00pm
Bloom + WhatRemains, Genesis
FEATURE FILM PROGRAM
Cinema Village
Through moments in the lives of three groups of girls, images gleaned from the web and live streams of young women around the world, BLOOM delves into the world of today's teenage girls. We delicately observe a hyper-connected but lonely generation inhabited by great lucidity, an inner struggle with self-image obsession, and a need for self-affirmation in the face of a complex sense of alienation.
Bloom | Fanie Pelletier, 2023, Canada, 84 min
Preceded by:
2048. Google owns most of the planet and is now run by Mark Zuckerberg. He finds a cure for death, through a digital immortality software that allows him to download himself into a hologram. While it is reserved for an elite group of rich and powerful men, a group of hackers seizes the source code of this program containing the antidote of immortality and makes it accessible to the whole world.
WhatRemains, Genesis | Lou Fauroux, 19 min
9:00pm
Fauna
FEATURE FILM
Cinema Village
In a forest on the outskirts of Barcelona an old shepherd and his flock live alongside a high-tech laboratory for animal experimentation. Two opposite worlds facing each other. Two worlds that are two sides of the same coin. While the shepherd, afflicted with a bone disease, witnesses his profession disappearing, scientists are busier than ever researching the covid vaccine. 'Fauna' is a science fiction fable about the relationship between humans, animals and science in post-pandemic times.
Fauna | Pau Faus, 2023, Spain, 74 min
Tuesday, October 24
Day 5
3:00pm
Land Rites
FEATURE FILM PROGRAM
Cinema Village
In the Brazilian Amazon, an indigenous community battles a move by the government to open up their lands to industrial exploitation. In Ecuador, a farmer voyages through the mysterious landscapes of the afterlife. And half a world apart in northern Scandinavia, a young "Protector of the Land" undergoes a ritual confrontation with nature.
Willkawiwa (The Sacred Fiire of the Dead) | Pável Quevedo Ullauri, 2023, Ecuador, 15 min
Anoana | Line Klungseth Johansen, 2022, Norway, 5 min
Holding Up the Sky | Pieter Van Eecke, 2023, Brazil, 52 min)
Total Run Time: 72 min
5:00pm
Body Problems
SHORT FILM PROGRAM
Cinema Village
Our bodies may defy our intentions and control. In this program we'll look at the ambiguities of hormones, the challenges of disability, the anxieties of sensory anomaly, and even the eerie promise of speculative gastronomical reconfiguration. But in these shape-shifting experiments in documentary and fictional storytelling, we find evidence that even our most critical somatic disconnects may be sublimated into poetry.
Well Wishes My Love, Your Love | Gabriel Gabriel Garble, 2023, Malaysia, 9 min
Hormonal | Pien van Grinsven, 2023, The Netherlands, 12 min
Cabbage | Holly Márie Parnell, 2023, Canada, 25 min
Pigment-Dispersion Syndrome | Jennifer Reeves, 2022, United States, 6 min
68.415 | Antonella Sabatino & Stefano Blasi, 2022, Italy, 20 min)
Total Run Time: 72 min
7:00pm
Foragers + The Despair of Monkeys
FEATURE FILM PROGRAM
Cinema Village
It is Palestinian custom to harvest and forage for plants but they must do so illegally under Israeli law—a process documented in this visual feast, from field to kitchen. Under Israeli law, it is illegal to harvest wild plants that are traditionally used for cooking, such as za'atar (thyme) and akkoub (gundelia), though the practice has been an age-old tradition among Palestinians. In the occupied Golan Heights, Galilee and Jerusalem, locals show their resilience despite the prohibitive law, refusing to be further alienated from their land. From field to kitchen to courtroom, Foragers reveals the joy and knowledge embedded in this Palestinian custom. Imbued with suspense and humor, Foragers is an important commentary on the extent of the Israeli occupation of Palestine—where violence is not only physical, but also cultural.
Foragers | Jumana Manna, 2023, Palestine, 64 min
Preceded by another view of botanical colonialism:
Early films of Patagonia show a land that no longer exists, pine trees have replaced the ancient Araucaria trees. Near my new home in Brussels, Araucarias adorn front yards. How have they become a petty bourgeois fad here? What do these representations tell us about our times?
The Despair of Monkeys | Julián García Long, 2023, France / Belgium, 17 min
9:00pm
Archive of the Future
FEATURE FILM
Cinema Village
At the Natural History Museum in Vienna, everything that is found on earth and in outer space and that humans can get their hands on, is collected, archived, and studied in the name of evolutionary research. Archiv der Zukunft captures the aesthetic appeal of the natural-history collection and its working process, illuminating the mammoth project of knowledge preservation and production hidden behind the building's imperial façade.
Archive of the Future | Joerg Burger, 2022, Austria, 92 min
Wednesday, October 25
Day 6
3:00pm
Herbaria
FEATURE FILM PROGRAM
Cinema Village
As an excursion to the work of botanical and film preservation, "Herbaria" explores in its invisible processes the artistic and political derivations that connect them. Sustained in a narration where times and spaces seem to merge, the records invite us to the fascinating universe of preserving the beauty and memory of a world that insists on disappearing.
Herbaria | Leandro Listorti, 2022, Argentina, 83 min
Preceded by:
Thoughts ripple over the pages of a personal notebook, kept during a stay at different science labs in Zürich. They float from one to another, like a mind map of unfinished ideas on memory, medical imaging, cells, and aging.
Beautiful Figures | Soetkin Verstegen, 2022, Belgium, 4 min
5:00pm
We Are Animals
SHORT FILM PROGRAM
Cinema Village
Boundaries between the human and animal worlds become fuzzy in this trio of coming-of-age stories. In near-future Indonesia, animal transformation via black magic has been legalized but racial tensions between humans remain. In an all-too-present U.S.A., a middle-schooler at science camp finds uncomfortable metaphors in amphibian biology. And in a glitch-punk dystopian Philippines, a teen forms a life-altering bond with a lab-escapee catfish. Prepare for a wild ride through the emotive, political, and possibly psychoactive possibilities of sci-narrative.
Sawo Matang | Andrea Nirmala Widjajanto, 2023, Indonesia, 21 min
Sound to Sea | Ryan Craver, 2023, United States, 26 min
Hito | Stephen Lopez, 2022, Philippines, 22 min
Total Run Time: 69 min
7:00pm
Light Needs + the Silence of the Banana Trees
FEATURE FILM PROGRAM
Cinema Village
Light Needs is an experimental documentary about houseplants who cohabitate with people and the surprisingly intimate and complex relationships that can develop between them. Containing footage collected from many different domestic and professional spaces over several years, each home/site evidences the different ways people cohabitate with and relate to plants. Yet, this film is ardently not a document of houseplants but rather a consideration of the benefits and losses accrued through the social contracts between plant and animal. By directly attending to the relationships humans have with nonhumans, Light Needs looks to shine a light on the responsibility for care towards other living beings.
Light Needs | Jesse McLean, 2023, United States, 72 min
Preceded by:
A father finds shelter in the memories he created together with his daughter to whom he hasn't spoken in years. The film transforms into a go-between in an attempt to unite them through images, sounds, and letters.
The Silence of The Banana Trees | Eneos Carka, 2022, Hungary, 24 min
9:00pm
The Night Visitors + The Departing Images
FEATURE FILM PROGRAM
Cinema Village
The Night Visitors is a movie about moths. In large and small fragments, looking both inward and out, through a critical lens that is by turns social and personal, the film closely examines these underknown creatures. While The Night Visitors is interested in moths as organisms, with fascinating life histories, staggering biodiversity, and a functional importance as indicators of climate change and habitat degradation, its engagement with them is not primarily entomological. Instead, the film looks at moths as aesthetic beings and as carriers of meaning, aiming for a deep encounter with the beauty and incommensurability of the profoundly other.
The small hours of the night are threaded through with a sense of mortality and loss. Moths, with their trembling and exquisite impermanence, provide both a kind of solace and, in their diversity and difference, a focal point around which the desire to know can be organized.
The Night Visitors | Michael Gitlin, 2023, United States, 72 min
Preceded by:
Between ethnography and reverie, the film enters the in-between spaces of dreams to explore how human and nonhuman social cartographies arise through dreaming alongside a Mapuche family in the south of Chile.
The Departing Images | Ana Edwards, 2023, Chile, 11 min
Thursday, October 26
Day 7
3:00pm
Rejieto
FEATURE FILM
Cinema Village
After the largest mining dam breaks in history, further dam collapses threaten millions in Brazil. A state counselor confronts the government's modus operandi, while dam refugees resist the mining companies' abuses in their threatened communities.
Rejeito | Pedro de Filippis, 2023, Brazil, 75 min
5:00pm
Biosphere Hearings
SHORT FILM PROGRAM
Cinema Village
Testimonials and negotiations from a motley bestiary of our neighbors in the biosphere: young blue jays debate with the wind before flight, fireflies and corals express desperation over human-indued shifts in their environments, bats swarm over Texas. But while biologists transmit signals to help protect the bats they love, a conference is organized to better exploit giant speaking newts. Elsewhere, termites labor on undeterred by any human aims or desires.
Minutes | Matthew Wolkow, 2023, Canada, 5 min
Strangers in the Dark | Jenni Pystynen & Perttu Inkilä, 2023, Finland, 12 min
The Newt Congress | Matthias Sahli & Immanuel Esser, 2022, Switzerland, 16 min
Batsies | Elizabeth Unger, 2023, United States, 14 min
Silent extinction | Maja Friis, 2023, Denmark, 12 min
White Ant | Shalini Adnani, 2023, United Kingdom / India, 14 min
Total Run Time: 73 min
7:00pm
The Arc of Oblivion + Testudo Hermanni
FEATURE FILM PROGRAM
Cinema Village
"The Arc of Oblivion" explores a quirk of humankind: in a universe that erases its tracks, we humans are hellbent on leaving a trace. Set against the backdrop of the filmmaker's quixotic quest to build an ark in a field in Maine, the film heads far afield - to salt mines in the Alps, fjords in the Arctic, and ancient libraries in the Sahara - to illuminate the strange world of archives, record-keeping, and memory.
The Arc of Oblivion | Ian Cheney, 2023, United States, 98 min
Preceded by:
A portrait of my mother, my tortoise, and mild winters: In 2009, I moved from my home in Salzburg, Austria, to the United States. The care of my pet tortoise, Tony, fell upon my mother, Kathleen. Tony's species, native to the Mediterranean, hibernate several months each winter at a predictable temperature. Our family's garage used to provide these conditions, but recent erratic winters forced my mother to find a more reliable, future-facing solution. What's revealed is an intimately amusing story of familial relationships rising to the occasion of unpredictable climate change, in which providing mindful care, above all, plays a crucial role.
Testudo Hermanni | G. Anthony Svatek, 2023, Austria, 7 min
9:00pm
The Face of the Jellyfish
FEATURE FILM
Cinema Village
Marina's face has suddenly changed. As in a Kafka-esque nightmare, one day in her thirties her face ceased to be what it was. Who is she now? Through Marina's story, the film delves into a reflection around the meaning of the face, emblem of our identity and nerve center of how we connect with others, human or non-human. Can we be somebody beyond our face, beyond our image?
The Face of the Jellyfish | Melisa Liebenthal, 2023, Argentina, 75 min
Friday, October 27
Day 8
7:00pm
Symbiosis Film Screening / Closing Night
CLOSING NIGHT + AWARDS
Wythe Hotel Screening Room
Be the first to see the films of this year's weeklong Art-Sci collaboration in the Symbiosis Competition and catch the awards ceremony of the 16th Science New Wave Festival at our closing party!
Date: October 20-27, 2023
Location: Cinema Village
22 East 12th street New York, 10003
Various locations in five boroughs of New York
Click here for more information