Disquiet

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Disquiet uses the movement of an anonymous figure through remote environments, to examine metaphysical journeys that are made through landscapes within the mind. After travelling by foot through a dark, woodland forest, a figure enters into a desolate, desert-like world. Its journey is intercepted by a looming structure – representing visions of society, memory and need – which is explored, but ultimately rejected, leaving the figure to continue on its quest towards an unknown destination.

SJ. Ramir

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Revenue

31-05-2011

Release Date

NZ

Country

6

Rating

2

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-

Age Rating

8 min

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Director
SJ. Ramir

SJ. Ramir

SJ.Ramir is an artist/filmmaker residing in Melbourne, Australia. His films often contain scenes of lone figures moving across remote and isolated landscapes, and are concerned with existence and its relationship to, and occupation of physical/geographical space. The landscapes and structures in his films are a mix of actual locations and constructed 3D models. The prominent style of his films came from early years of experimentation with custom-made lens filters. These filters enhanced video pixels and produced hazy, distorted images, which Ramir felt were visually suggestive of emotional states connected with a central theme in his work: isolation. "On a visual/conceptual level, I’m constructing, then examining an inner world or mental state that somehow traps us and defines us – it’s also a response to the deprivation of knowledge; deprivation of answers to questions we have about life, self-identity, existence and lastly, a response to self-delusion. Do we view anything in this world through a clear lens? I doubt it. I place a self-made filter over the lens of my camera, which then distorts its view. In essence, each of us do this to ourselves everyday – consciously or subconsciously. I think that the images in my films are very aligned to a human perspective on the world.' - SJ.Ramir Ramir’s distinctive films have screened at many prestigious film festivals and art galleries worldwide, including: The 67th Venice International Film Festival, International Film Festival Rotterdam, Oberhausen International Short Film Festival, Melbourne International Film Festival, the Australian Centre for Photography and the Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography.
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