mdblist.com logo The Best Alexandra Karelina Directed Movies


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Keiji Haino (2020)
The film about the legend of Japanese experimental rock Keiji Haino reveals the veil of mystery surrounding the musician for all 50 years of his career. Haino's reflections on music, culture and life, recorded after a performance in Moscow in November 2019, are interspersed with fragments of the performance itself.
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How to Behave (2018)
A short film about a foreshadowed trauma that turned out to be a transformative experience. A nameless girl gazes into the frail world, and a blow beyond all bearing forces her to change. Symbolic footage brings about a deep plunge into sensory experience of change, loss, pain, and trust.
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L'ailier (2024)
“For a very long time, I couldn’t shake the feeling that this was a dream,” she said.
But even they, enjoying the beautiful park, hardly notice the planes roaring overhead from a nearby military base.
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DVA (2023)
Sirens drone over the city, announcing a state of emergency involving “disturbance of the electromagnetic field”, while individuals clandestinely fiddle with soldered bits of leftover technology. The cyberpunk mode of dystopian science fiction did not end in the 1990s; thanks to the pandemic and other crises, it’s back – with a vengeance. Alexandra Karelina’s film, superbly shot by Egor Protsko, treats this genre in an experimental way, flashing cryptic images and offering bottomless scenarios of social breakdown.
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Bobok (2021)
Video by Alexandra Karelina and Ivan Yakushev refers to Dostoevsky's deep interest in borderline states—primarily death, but also lethargy. In Bobok, the narrator, out of boredom, goes to a funeral of a distant relative. Later, taking thought, he lies down on a tombstone and begins to hear the dead, who continue to talk to each other as if by inertia. The authors of the film translate imagery and tone of this story into a ritual action. Abstract space of fabrics, industrial materials, and human body transforms and disintegrates, blurring the line between living and inanimate.
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Last Words (2020)
The film’s main protagonists are household items of the 1950s-1970s shot on film. Their path goes from the written to the erased. From the clear to the forgotten. Obsession with the past — this is their space. The images gradually become and blurred down to pure emotion. Nothing can be saved, and it is impossible to return anywhere. This is a film where the characters take the stage for the last time.


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