Malgorzata Kitowski presented this event on Tuesday October 6th 2009. To tie in with National Poetry Day 2009 (08/09/09), the theme of this event was Heroes and
Heroines.
Heroes and Heroines celebrated included: Freegans; Hitchcock,
Rachmaninov, Bunuel, Dali, and Madame de Pompadour; doppelgangers, Gaston
Bachelard and Rilke.
PROGRAMME
MORE FOR LESS– Sonal Sachdeva
Martin and
Alf have been living over the past few years as Freegans, living from the
excessive waste generated by people & supermarkets. In a way they have
chosen to go against the societal norm of having steady, paid jobs and yet
survive well by not participating in the process of earning money and adding to
the burden of existing over-consumption in western society, which creates far
more throwaway waste than we can handle. Taking this stand leaves them more time
to interact with members of the public. They have taken this to the next level
by walking around London for 7 days with the strong conviction that by helping
and serving people, and not worrying about where their next meal comes from, one
truly begins to live.
LA SONNAMBULA – Marco Sanges and Alberto Bona
The heroes are Hitchcock,
Rachmaninov, Bunuel and Dali.
The heroine is Madame de Pompadour.
Bellini's opera is unrelated.
THE MAN WHO MET HIMSELF – Ben
Crowe
Ben Crowe left his job, bought a Super8 camera, and made this film,
which was nominated for the Palme D’Or at Cannes 2005. A mysterious call, a
photograph of a man, and a private detective compelled by the one case that
finally got to him. On a stark but brilliant day in London, Austin Petersen
takes a job from an anonymous client, a job he knows he should refuse. What
happened to Stephen Maker? Did he fake his own death, or do doppelgangers really
exist?
BOUND – Ben Crowe (World Premiere)
During a train journey
through the English countryside a passenger is wrapped in the everyday mystery
off remembering: his childhood home, a loving family and the future that awaits.
The film is a eulogy of sorts and was inspired by the spaces, shapes, smells,
objects, colours, patterns and sounds of “home”: all are fragments of a journey
from childhood to adulthood to a vision of old age. The film is a commingling of
pasts, presents and futures within a loving family and a changing world. We are
always plural and social; our stories already written in part by the mistakes
and failures, aspirations and sacrifices of earlier generations. Ben Crowe chose
the title to suggest that to be “bound” is not to be “captured”. The film also
draws on Gaston Bachelard’s Poetics of Space and Rilke’s “The world is large,
but in us it is as deep as the sea.”
JE SUIS ICI– Ben Crowe & Preti
Taneja
Je Suis Ici is inspired by being on holiday in the south of France
and the slight mismatch between expectations and reality. Poet Sophie Mayer
wrote a poem in response to the film which she will perform after the
screening.
FOLLOWED BY:
Poetry performance from SOPHIE MAYER
Sophie Mayer is a writer and educator. She studied and taught
English literature and film studies at the universities of Cambridge and
Toronto, and taken part in the poetry performance and publication scenes in both
of those cities, as well as in London, where she now lives. Her Various Scalpels
(Shearsman, 2009) is her first solo collection.
Poetry performance from
LUKE HEELEY
Luke Heeley's poems have appeared in the pamphlet Ask for It
by Name, The Times Literary Supplement, Reactions 4, The Wolf and online at The
Poem. He won an Eric Gregory Award in 2002.
He collaborated with the poet
and translator Luca Paci and the musician Rowan Porteous in making the poem-film
London Trip-tych, and in 2007, was one of a group of poets commissioned by the
BFI to write poems in response to its 'Essentially British' collection of
films.
Poetry performance from JOHN STILES
John Stiles is the
author of the poetry collections, Scouts are Cancelled (Insomniac Press, 2002),
and Creamsicle Stick Shivs (Insomniac Press, 2006), as well as the novels, The
Insolent Boy (Insomniac Press, 2001) and Taking the Stairs, (Nightwood Editions,
2008). Featured on CBC's 'Q', Much Music, and TVO's 'Imprint', John has also
written for The Globe and Mail and The Literary Review of Canada, amongst
others. John and his poems are the subject of a documentary film, Scouts are
Cancelled .
The readings were followed by a very interesting Q&A with the directors and poets. Topics covered included Freeganism (can chip shop fat be turned into diesel?), the benefits of tangential thinking, and the lost art of violin-making.