Harman Patil (Editor)

Gravitation: Variation in Time and Space

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Directed by
  
Andrei Severny

Starring
  
Diana Vishneva

Initial release
  
14 October 2015

Screenplay
  
Rem Khass

Cast
  
Diana Vishneva

Produced by
  
Rem Khass

Cinematography
  
Steve Romano

Director
  
Andrei Severny

Producer
  
Rem Khass

Music director
  
Arvo Pärt, Richard Garet

Gravitation: Variation in Time and Space

Written by
  
Rem Khass, Andrei Severny

Music by
  
Arvo Part, Richard Garet

Similar
  
Tom on Mars, Condition, Teaching to See

gravitation variation in time and space a cinespace 2015 film


Gravitation: Variation in Time and Space is a 2015 black & white art film, directed by Andrei Severny. Gravitation is a synergy of dance, cinema and abstract art and stars Diana Vishneva, principal dancer of the Mariinsky Ballet and the American Ballet Theater. The movements were choreographed by Mauro Bigonzetti specifically for the film. The work was shot entirely in slow motion with Phantom Flex4K cameras in 500-1,000 frames-per-second. The film was shot on location at the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater in New York City.

Contents

Gravitation premiered at the Marfa Film Festival in October 2015. It received a Golden Palm Award at the Mexico International Film Festival and a Rising Star Award at the Canada International Film Festival. It was selected by NASA as a finalist at the CineSpace program at the Houston Cinema Arts Festival and screened at the Museum of Fine Arts Houston and screened in Moscow, London, Rome, Santander, Napa, Martinique.

Synopsis

The film is a story of creation, inner struggle and transformation. Calligraphic black and white images are rich in metaphors exploring the notions of time and space, movement and light. The film is divided in chapters: Birth, Desire, Clash, Despair, Gravitation.

The director Andrei Severny said about the film: “We tried to show the ballerina’s movement like you’ve never seen it before. Powerful back lighting and slow motion focuses viewer’s attention on the calligraphic perfection of the lines and guides into unusual visual world. The shots of the moon and space from the NASA archives become metaphors of loneliness and eternity of space and make us reconsider the whole notion of time.”

References

Gravitation: Variation in Time and Space Wikipedia