This Month in Binocular Briefs: Exploring Obsession, Rhythm, and Surreal Love in Animation

This Month in Binocular Briefs: Exploring Obsession, Rhythm, and Surreal Love in Animation

This month in Binocular Briefs, we dive into an eclectic selection of films that traverse the depths of human emotion and experience, featuring an obsessive love letter writer, a beleaguered soul navigating a hijacked, video game-like dystopia reminiscent of Grand Theft Auto, rhythm-driven skiers performing gravity-defying feats, interminably lengthy on-hold phone calls that test patience, and one particularly amorous sausage that redefines culinary passion.

Kafka. In Love, Zane Oborenko, Latvia/Czech Republic

In 1920, literary giant Franz Kafka embarked on a passionate and tumultuous relationship with Milena Jesenská, a married woman who became a muse for his existential musings. Over the course of their correspondence, he penned more than 120 intimate letters that were later curated into the poignant collection Letters to Milena. Kafka. in Love draws inspiration from Kafka’s heartfelt words, transforming them into a rich tapestry that unpacks the intense, often tumultuous nature of romantic love, capturing its heady highs alongside its crippling lows. It poses a profound question about this maddening yet irresistible force: what compels us to experience both ecstatic joy and gut-wrenching despair in love?

This innovative film employs layered sand animation crafted in After Effects, weaving a visual narrative that is both mesmerizing and evocative. Some scenes are skillfully rotoscoped, while a poignant single shot featuring a spinning droplet encapsulates the film’s themes. Additionally, Kafka’s own handwriting, meticulously sourced from original letters, has been animated using time-honored 2D techniques, adding a personal touch. The chiaroscuro-dominated visuals dance with light and darkness, each frame reflecting the duality of love, as shadows and illumination engage in a captivating, endless waltz.

Freeride in C, Edmunds Jansons, Latvia

“As we go up, we go down,” an ancient pre-Socratic philosopher once mused long before Robert Pollard echoed these sentiments in song, capturing the cyclical nature of existence. These seemingly simple words resonate deeply, manifesting through the metaphor of skiing as a poignant representation of life’s ups and downs. Picture for a moment the exhilaration of racing downhill on powdery snow, only to face the exhausting ascent back up—a Sisyphean task devoid of ski lifts. This recent Grand Prize winner at the Fredrikstad Animation Festival is an additional testament to the beauty inherent in rhythm and flow.

Freeride in C showcases a stunning audiovisual landscape where vibrant hues of sky blue, snowy white, and eye-catching stop-sign red create an enchanting backdrop, inviting viewers to lose themselves in the hypnotic charm of Jansons’s playful loops. It is not just an experimental piece; it pays homage to the rich history of abstract animation through cleverly named ski hills that reference animation legends, all while celebrating the transient yet profound joys found on a ski hill.

On Hold, Delia Hess, Switzerland

As much as I may shy away from social interactions, there’s nothing that drives one to the brink of madness quite like being ensnared in the frustrating limbo of an on-hold phone call, desperately trying to connect with a flesh-and-blood representative—only to be met with the inevitable cycle of transfers that lead nowhere. However, as the initial anger dissipates, a surreal transition occurs, plunging you into a dreamlike reverie that mimics that peculiar state somewhere between waking and dreaming, where your thoughts drift into whimsical absurdities, suspended between reality and imagination. Can anyone else relate, or should I brace myself for an impending discussion with my therapist?

That essence of cosmic strangeness and beauty surrounding these drifting thoughts is the central theme of Delia Hess’s On Hold, which delves into the peculiarities of life, rife with Escher-like repetition that captures the quirks and absurdities we navigate daily.

Vegan Mayo, Luca Toth, Hungary

Born under the playful banner of Gemini, alongside a myriad of other astrological traits, this quirky sausage character sees herself as a “justice warrior” and an “ultimate empath.” But despite these lofty aspirations, her truest focus seems to lie in her quest for romantic connection and physical intimacy.

Bathed in a kaleidoscope of hyper-saturated bubblegum colors, Vegan Mayo pulsates with the hypnotic allure often found in the most enticing candy shops—a paradise for those yearning for something sweet. This surreal and comedic piece blissfully intertwines the bizarre with the erotic, challenging viewers to reconsider their culinary choices while simultaneously evoking a kind of sensory pleasure that might just have Betty and Barry White’s iconic moans sizzling like eggs in a pan.

Kinderfilm, Total Refusal, Austria

Total Refusal represents the bold new wave sweeping through the animation landscape, a collective that isn’t afraid to interrogate and reshape the genres of machinima with a distinct and purposeful lens. This self-proclaimed pseudo-Marxist group reinforces its agenda through the mechanics of video games, crafting sharp critiques on labor, capitalism, and the meaning of our existence. They raise an uncomfortable yet vital question: Is our sole purpose in life merely to serve others while enriching those at the top?

If your answer leans toward the affirmative, it might be time for a serious introspective reevaluation.

The narrative progresses until a vibrant yellow school bus grabs his attention, prompting him to eagerly board—a decision that leads him past a cemetery, symbolizing the mundanity of a world stripped of mystery and excitement. It paints a stark picture of a sterile existence created through complacency, a simulacrum lacking in vibrancy and wonder because we, as a society, have let that happen.

Despite these somber reflections, the film concludes with an utterly bizarre finale that does more than just confound; it brings laughter and injects a glimmer of hope into an otherwise bleak narrative.

A well-known figure in the world of independent animation, writer, author & curator Chris Robinson is the Artistic Director of the Ottawa International Animation Festival.

Leave a Replay