Episodes
🇬🇧 The guest of this episode of HOBO is Signe Baumane, a Latvian animator, artist, illustrator and writer, currently living and working in New York City. She wrote, directed, designed and animated 16 shorts and two animated feature films. Her new work “My Love Affair With Marriage” tells the story of a spirited young woman’s quest for perfect love and lasting marriage. It premiered in June 2022 at Tribeca Festival and has screened at over 90 festivals winning twenty awards. A story about the...
Published 05/12/24
The guest of this episode of HOBO is Varya Yakovleva, a Russian animator now based in Paris. She spent 6 years at The Gerasimov Institute of Cinematography, a film school in Moscow, then 2 years at the SHAR School-Studio with leading directors and animators. From 2013 she worked with Andrey Khrzhanovsky for a stop motion film called The Nose or the Conspiracy of Mavericks. Nowadays she does her own stuff, mostly animation films, the latest of which is Oneluv: a powerful and visually strong...
Published 03/13/24
The guest of this episode of HOBO is legendary Bruce LaBruce, director, photographer, performer, writer and queer provocateur. In his remake of Pier Paolo Pasolini's Teorema, set in a contemporary British context, “the visitor” is represented as a racial minority. A bold choice, considering the xenophobia and paranoia about immigration currently displayed in Europe, not only by the increasingly vocal extreme right wing elements actually gaining political traction and governmental...
Published 03/13/24
The guest of this episode of HOBO is Lei Lei, an experimental animation artist with his hands on video arts, painting, installation, music and VJ performance. His new project, “That Day, on the River”, newspaper clippings, historical photographs and a film about a female basketball player serve as the source material for an exploration of his father’s childhood in provincial China. The film is held together by a conversation between he and his father originally recorded during the production...
Published 10/31/23
One may wonder: what can a three-hour film set almost entirely in a car, shot with a fixed camera from the rear, offer cinematically? The answer is an unexpectedly engaging observation of the rhythms of daily life and a catalogue of suburban worries. The Plains by David Easteal charts the passage of time as the seasons change. The pitter-patter of rain on the windows and the familiar cocoon of the car provide a sense of comfort and safety from the outside elements.
Published 03/22/23
What happens when an agency task at protecting the citizenry and ensuring that the duly constituted laws of the land are adhered to becomes the enforcer of human rights violations? This is the question posed by “When the Waves Are Gone”, the latest film by Filipino master Lav Diaz. The very current shocking Ukraine invasion by Russia and the resultant brutality seems unheard of but it is just a magnification of the human malady that has been with us forever—how humanity has become so...
Published 03/22/23
Dogborn by Isabella Carbonell had its world premiere at Venice International Film Critics’ Week. The story, penned by Carbonell herself, revolves around two Lithuanian twins struggling to make ends meet. Through brilliant writing choices and excellent direction, the film manages to set up a clear conflict between the two lead characters: the sister (played by Swedish rapper Silvana Imam) who initially seems ready to achieve her goals at all costs, and her brother (portrayed by Philip Oros),...
Published 03/22/23
Anhell69 by Theo Montoya had its world premiere at Venice International Film Critics’ Week. A funeral car cruises the streets of Medellín, while a young director tells the story of his past in this violent and conservative city. He remembers the pre- production of his first film, a B-movie with ghosts. The young queer scene of Medellín is casted for the film, but the main protagonist dies of a heroin overdose at the age of 21, just like many friends of the director. ANHELL69 explores the...
Published 03/22/23
Aus meiner Haut (Skin Deep) directed by Alex Schaad and written by Dimitrij Schaad (presented in the Venice International Film Critics’ Week) won the Queer Lion 2022 awarded by the jury chaired by Rich Cline, journalist and film critic. The intimate, character-driven story sees a young couple – played by “And Tomorrow the Entire World” actor Mala Emde and Jonas Dassler – deciding to visit a remote island, hoping they might be able to solve their problems in a place that literally allows you...
Published 03/22/23
A misfit teenager, an anxious mother, and a recent widow see their day interrupted by a mysterious natural phenomenon. As their world descends into chaos, the three women struggle to find their place in life. This is the initial idea of ​​Ordinary Failures, an apocalyptic tale calling for human solidarity directed by Cristina Groșan.
Published 03/22/23
Our journey through International cinema takes us now to Philippines. At the end of April we attended the Far East Film Festival in Udine where we had the chance to interview Filipino director Martika Ramirez Escobar about her feature debut “Leonor Will Never Die” alongside the protagonist of the film Sheila Francisco, a singer and veteran of the theater. Ramirez Escobar has created an exciting and strange film about a retired filmmaker who gets bonked on the head by a television accidentally...
Published 03/22/23
The former players of the Japanese women’s volleyball team used to be known as the ‘Witches of the Orient’ because of their seemingly supernatural powers on the courts. In the Julien Faraut’s film, the formation of the squad in the late 1950s as a worker’s team at a textile factory, right up until their triumph at the 1964 Olympic Games in Tokyo, their memories and stern discipline are evoked through modern-day sequences, archival footage, and cartoon images where fact and fable fly hand in...
Published 03/22/23
With the distinguished director Sergei Loznitsa, we’ll discuss his new film “Mr. Landsbergis”, which premiered at the 25th Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival. For the first time Mr. Loznitsa appears as the interviewer in conversation with Professor Vytautas Landsbergis about crucial events from 1987 till 1993. Winner of the top prize at the International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam, this epic chronicle of the early collapse of the USSR is authoritative and detailed even by the...
Published 03/22/23
La Paz is the least western capital of the Americas. Located at more than 3600 metres above sea level, the city spreads like a sea of bricks, stones and concrete in the canyons that precede the “altiplano”. Bolivian director Kiro Russo recreates a symphony of the city in the heights with a tale of nightmare and redemption of the working class. El Gran Movimiento won the special jury prize at the Venice Film Festival Horizons strand in 2021.
Published 03/22/23
In the seconde episode of HOBO we move to Georgia to meet Alexandre Koberidze, who found his second feature “What Do We See When We Look at the Sky?" placed prominently within the main competition slate of the Berlinale’s online edition of this year, where it was met with considerable acclaim and the receipt of the FIPRESCI prize. In his film, no single moment is deemed more valuable than any other: the camera drifting gently to gaze at children playing in the park, dogs jauntily sauntering...
Published 03/22/23
The Chilean director Joaquin Cociña will reveal his sources of inspiration - including Ladislas Starevich, the Russian animator famous for his stop-motion movies with dead bugs - and discuss “Los Huesos”, a movie (co-directed con CristĂłbal LeĂłn) which tries to find an answer to the question: “What would have happened if Chile had been the birthplace of animated cinema?”.
Published 03/22/23