comparemela.com

Latest Breaking News On - Richard fung - Page 8 : comparemela.com

Alchemy Film & Moving Image Festival 2021 report

Sign up for Sight & Sound’s Weekly Film Bulletin and more News, reviews and archive features every Friday, and information about our latest magazine once a month. Email Sign up Back in April 2020, in the early days of the Covid-19 pandemic, when Alchemy Film & Moving Image Festival realised that they couldn’t proceed with their typically convivial in-person event in the town of Hawick in the Scottish borders, the organisers decided to pivot at short notice to a free global streaming edition. Of course, they weren’t the only ones then to assume the switch would be a one-off – but one year later and their second online festival took place across the May Day bank holiday weekend (29 April–3 May). And so it was that the programmes took the opportunity to reflect on the past year – for many, one defined by a sense of stasis – by curating a programme that in various ways engaged with notions of repetition, cycles, loops, constraints and catastr

Alchemy Film and Moving Image Festival announces its full programme

Alchemy Film and Moving Image Festival announces its full programme In Vivo by Karel Doing th time from 29 April-3 May. The event, co-directed by Rachael Disbury and Michael Pattison, will showcase 171 works encompassing experimental film, artists’ moving image and animation, split into live screenings and on-demand programmes. The entire programme will be available worldwide, for free. In addition, all 171 films will be captioned for d/Deaf audiences, and a selection of audio-described programmes can also be enjoyed by blind and partially sighted audiences. Discussion events and Q&As will also be live-captioned. (The article continues below - Commercial information) This year’s iteration includes two keynote speeches by historian

© 2024 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.