Gold (2015 film)

Gold
Directed by Alexander Tuschinski
Produced by Alexander Tuschinski
Music by Ludwig van Beethoven
Cinematography Alexander Tuschinski
Edited by Alexander Tuschinski
Release dates
  • July 3, 2015 (2015-07-03) (Greece)
Running time
7 minutes
Country Germany
Language English

Gold. is a German experimental short documentary film directed by Alexander Tuschinski. It intercuts abandoned 19th century gold-mining towns in the desert with sequoia trees in a forest. The film had its world premiere at Mykonos Biennale on July 3, 2015,[1] where it was screened in competition[2] and received the Biennale's Golden Pelican Award by Lydia Venieri.[3] It had its German premiere at Berlin Short Film Festival on July 4, 2015,[4] was screened in competition at Braunschweig International Film Festival 2015.[5] and had its US-premiere at Hollywood Reel Independent Film Festival in 2016.

Production

The film is set to the fourth movement of Beethoven's seventh symphony, which has been called "Apotheosis of Dance" by Richard Wagner. The director's intention was to intercut nature and human structures to show nature overtaking. It was filmed with a tight schedule and the crew travelled long distances in a short amount of time to get many different shots needed. Tuschinski edited the film from six hours of material from "countless camera-angles", as most shots are shown only very briefly due to the often rapid editing. Planning the film, he was inspired by the early works of his friend and mentor Hugo Niebeling that connect cinematoraphy and music in a very direct way.[6]

Reception

He knows how to use the power of images.
Ursula Drees, article about "Gold" on plusinsight.com[7]
Alexander Tuschinski in "Gold." narrates the constant story of the exploits just with images and music (...). His original and personal style make us honor "Gold." with The Golden Pelican.
Lydia Venieri, president of Mykonos Biennale[8]
An experimental short film (...) looking at humanity's battle for currency and profit.

Screenings

The film was screened in competition at the following festivals:

References

External links


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