Simone Fürbringer
2021Lucie et Maintenant
Werner Penzel, Simone Fürbringer
Océane Madelaine, Jocelyn Bonnerave
In May of 1982 Julio Cortázar, the Argentinean writer and his companion in life, Carol Dunlop set out in their VW bus on a journey along the highway from Paris to Marseille that, for each of them, was to be their final one. Twenty-five years later, Océane Madelaine and Jocelyn Bonnerave set out to undertake the journey again.
Lucie et Maintenant
Vagabonding Images
Simone Fürbringer, Nicolas Humbert
A film that ressembles a dream. Shot over a period of several years, it is composed of fragments of memory and moments of life woven together to create a sequence of microscopic stories. “Vagabonding Images” is a film that plays with the forms of cinematic language inspired by the poetic collage techniques of the French Surrealists and Japanese Haiku poets.
Vagabonding Images
Ong Dong Dreoka
Simone Fürbringer
"To make a film means to invent a music of pictures, sounds and rhythms; means to compose visual values, that have no equivalents in other art forms," wrote Marcel L’Herbier in the thirties. To plumb the possibilities that lie within the film material itself is what, for me, accounts for the meaning as well as the desire to work in film. Film as the disclosure of a fantastic world which the spectator can dive into and, ideally, have his imagination kindled. ONG DONG DREOKA is a game with images, a carousel that turns, a magic spell, a memory, for adults, of childhood." -Simone Fürbringer
Ong Dong Dreoka
Farakan Heartbeat
Simone Fürbringer
An African backyard, the stage of life. Rhythms rise up from everywhere, interweave with one another. It is a daily dance of gestures and sounds that has something eternal. The music of life is omnipresent and leads us to the heart of Africa.
Farakan Heartbeat
I'm a Crow - An Afternoon with Milo Yellow Hair
Simone Fürbringer, Nicolas Humbert
Milo Yellow Hair
Author and activist Milo Yellow Hair (Oglala Lakota) is one of the most important intellectual voices of the American Indian resistance movement. Born in 1950 and raised on the Pine Ridge Reservation, he has dedicated himself to the struggle for the recognition and survival of indigenous cultures. We spent an afternoon asking him questions on the theme of memory and cultural identity. Memories are not what has passed, but are the cutting edge between past and present. Never before has so much information been saved and forgotten at the same time. What happens when we lose the memory of our heritage? Is it preserved in collective memory and made accessible in the challenges of the future?
I'm a Crow - An Afternoon with Milo Yellow Hair