Massimilian & Nina Breeder - Devil Come To Hell and Stay Where You Belong

Rating: 

Average: 3 (3 votes)

From a small cabin in the mountains of New York, Nina Breeder and Massimilian Breeder begin a journey across the United States. California is just the initial destination, but just as the edge of the surrounding landscape expands, so does their ultimate d“Bonnie & Clyde meet Bruno Dumont in a sensually explosive road trip through the USA.” – CPH:DOX Festival, Copenhagen, 2008

Devil Come To Hell and Stay Where You Belong directed by Nina and Massimilian Breeder is an outstanding cinematographic work of art. From a small cabin in the mountains of New York, the artists begin their journey across the United States. California is the initial destination, but just as the edge of the surrounding landscape expands, so does their ultimate destination. Immersed in the impressive countryside, these two nameless characters hit the road in quest of sensations, images and sounds. Humans as well as nature are vulnerable: dead animals on the road, dying forests, the drying out of the earth, the actors' wounds, all are evident signs of the ecological and human fragility. Devil Come To Hell and Stay Where You Belong is a contemplation of nature and time along a raw journey through the American landscape.

Devil Come To Hell and Stay Where You Belong is also a reflection about the cinematographic treatment of landscape and how filmmakers apprehend, draw and become part of it, in a perpetual coming and going between force and fragility, appropriation and reject, proximity and distance. Within this artistic research the film oscillates between different cinematographic genres and evokes elements of a road movie, a documentary, and a performance film, yet without completely belonging to one of those categories. The strength of the film lies precisely in its hybridity and openness based on the artists’ very personal experience.

Devil Come To Hell and Stay Where You Belong has been shot in HD without the support of a film crew; the filmmakers are both the camera operators and the main characters. Any narrative event in the movie occurred at the time and place that it was filmed. The subjects and events filmed have not been modified from their original appearance and no action was re-staged for better results. In order to preserve the intimacy that occurred in the act of observing the scenes depicted, no camera assistants, boom operators or producers were involved.

DETAILS

1 Film(s), 1 Bonus Film(s), Interviews, Bios, runtime 100 minutes, NTSC, ALL ZONES, stereo, 4:3, Interview with Massimilian and Nina Breeder by François Michaud and Silke Schmickl

Languages: English

“Bonnie & Clyde meet Bruno Dumont in a sensually explosive road trip
through the USA.” – CPH:DOX Festival, Copenhagen, 2008
Devil Come To Hell and Stay Where You Belong directed by Nina
and Massimilian Breeder is an outstanding cinematographic work of art.
From a small cabin in the mountains of New York, the artists begin their
journey across the United States. California is the initial destination, but
just as the edge of the surrounding landscape expands, so does their
ultimate destination. Immersed in the impressive countryside, these two
nameless characters hit the road in quest of sensations, images and
sounds. Humans as well as nature are vulnerable: dead animals on the
road, dying forests, the drying out of the earth, the actors' wounds, all
are evident signs of the ecological and human fragility. Devil Come To Hell and Stay Where You
Belong is a contemplation of nature and time along a raw journey through the American landscape.
Devil Come To Hell and Stay Where You Belong is also a reflection about the cinematographic
treatment of landscape and how filmmakers apprehend, draw and become part of it, in a perpetual
coming and going between force and fragility, appropriation and reject, proximity and distance. Within
this artistic research the film oscillates between different cinematographic genres and evokes
elements of a road movie, a documentary, and a performance film, yet without completely belonging to
one of those categories. The strength of the film lies precisely in its hybridity and openness based on
the artists’ very personal experience.
Devil Come To Hell and Stay Where You Belong has been shot in HD without the support of a film
crew; the filmmakers are both the camera operators and the main characters. Any narrative event in
the movie occurred at the time and place that it was filmed. The subjects and events filmed have not
been modified from their original appearance and no action was re-staged for better results. In order to
preserve the intimacy that occurred in the act of observing the scenes depicted, no camera assistants,
boom operators or producers were involved.

Please notice that our website is not a shop. The items listed here are just for reference. Links will be provided when the publication is not generally available via standard retailers.

Add new comment

Filtered HTML

  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <blockquote> <code> <img> <h2> <h1> <h3> <div> <span> <section> <b> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <p> <table> <td> <tr>
  • Use [fn]...[/fn] (or <fn>...</fn>) to insert automatically numbered footnotes.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether or not you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.

Data

Price: 

25.00 EUR

Publisher: 

Label: 

lowave

Publishing date: 

Thursday, December 31, 2009

Runtime: 

100

Discs: 

1

Language: 

English

Region: 

Multizone

Video: 

NTSC

Aspect ratio: 

4:3

Colour: 

Colour

Sound: 

DD2.0