Wednesday, September 05, 2018

Out of Competetion - La Biennale di Venezia - Film Festival – Aquarela – Victor Kossakovsky


Photograph courtesy La Biennale di Venezia

Out of Competetion - La Biennale di Venezia - Film Festival  
Aquarela – Victor Kossakovsky

The Documentary Aquarela takes audiences on a deeply cinematic journey through the transformative beauty and raw power of water. Filmed at 96 frames-per second, the film is a visceral wake-up call that humans are no match for the sheer force and capricious will of Earth’s most precious element. From the precarious frozen waters of Russia’s Lake Baikal to Miami in the throes of Hurricane Irma to Venezuela’s mighty Angel Falls, water is Aquarela’s main character, with director Victor Kossakovsky capturing her many personalities in startling visual detail.

Photograph courtesy La Biennale di Venezia 

 Aquarela – Victor Kossakovsky

Photograph courtesy La Biennale di Venezia

“When I was four, I spent a summer in a village between Moscow and St. Petersburg at a river source. A man who lived there, Mikhail Belov, said to me, “If you made a little boat from wood chip and leaves, then put it in this river, it would float on the water to the North Sea and then around the world.” Years later I returned to that village to shoot my film, Belovy. I put my camera into a little boat and I made the journey from that village to the sea. In 2000, I stayed in a house on the Baltic Sea. The sea was different every day, hour and minute. Different colors, movements, energies… through the lens of water you would be able to experience all known human emotion. With Aquarela, I wanted to film every possible emotion experienced while interacting with water: beautiful and unsettling emotions – ecstasy and inspiration as well as destruction and human devastation.”
Victor Kossakovsky
Director’s statement

 Photograph courtesy La Biennale di Venezia

 Aquarela – Victor Kossakovsky

Contessanally – beautiful, dramatic, tragic documentary - melting glaciers, hurricanes – beautiful shot – 8/10