Winter Bees (2018)
AUT 2018, 13min
Originalformat: Super8 bw & color
Sreeningformat: HD-Digital
English with the Option of German Subtitles
Realised with Funding by stadt wien & bka
Distribution by sixpackfilm
Concept & Camera: Josephine Ahnelt
Sound: Wolf-Maximilian Liebich
Editing: Maiko Endo
Graphics: Araki Koman
VIS National Competiton Special Mention
The Special Mention goes to a personal, atmospheric Documentary Film about living abroad. Illustrations, Super8 Images in color and black and white merge expertly. The Audio adds another Layer of Meaning to the Movie. Asking big questions regarding our Life and Purpose. Winter Bees by Josephine Ahnelt is an outstanding Film - associative as well as inspiring.
Screening Selection:
2.6.2018 VIS-Festival, Vienna, Austria
15.1.2019 Max Ophüls Preis, Saarbrücken, Germany
5.2.2019 Cinema Next Special, Topkino Vienna, Austria
Catalogtext sixpackfilm:
Film as means of self-interrogation: Josephine Ahnelt lived 13 months in Japan. In Winter Bees, she speaks over the course of 13 chapters on a very personal level about her life and work in a foreign country with its unfamiliar culture.
The soundtrack plays back a Skype conversation between two women and is reminiscent of a therapy setting – one of the women is the filmmaker herself. They talk about romantic troubles, psychological states, and discuss the artist´s work on the film we are watching.
The interdependence of life and art threads through their conversations. How does one deal with the vulnerability that arises from being unwilling to compromise and revealing oneself to an audience? What influence does life have on artmaking and which parts of private life become the object of artistic examination? The film´s imagery relates to the spoken word on an associative level, showing everyday scenes and people – mainly in black and white, with occasional flashes of motifs in color. The materiality of Super 8 establishes a special sense of intimacy to what is being filmed, reminiscent of home movies – it is as if these are images of family. Children at play are often seen and people smiling into the camera, street scenes, urban landscapes and nature. In certain moments, the filmmaker shows herself. At one point she cries, at another she looks into the camera held by a child. A toying with the filmic gaze and the refusal to be seen continually emerges, and can be read as a commentary on the customs of a country in which feelings and affection are not publicly displayed.
The 13 chapters are indicated by filigree drawings in black on white, of people and things organized into lines like letters or graphic characters – like diary entries in pictures: an alphabet of questions and doubts, the high and low points of a certain stage in the filmmaker´s life.
(sixpackfilm Text by Andrea Pollach)