Plastic Bag
Werner Herzog gives voice to a plastic bag's existential crisis. A very unique and powerful filmmaking statement by celebrated director Ramin Bahrani.
Werner Herzog gives voice to a plastic bag's existential crisis. A very unique and powerful filmmaking statement by celebrated director Ramin Bahrani.
Leaving you with more questions than answers, it would have felt wrong to let the recently featured short film 'BAG MAN' pass-by without talking a bit more about the filmmaking and storytelling involved. Having tried to leave the article on the film as vague as possible to avoid spoiling the impact of the movie, we took the chance to speak to directorial duo Jonathan & Josh Baker about their head-turner of a short.
With a mysterious duffle bag in hand, a 12-year old boy takes us on an introspective journey out of the city and into the remote countryside of upstate New York.
An S/W Award winner in 2014, "Bag Man" has transformed into "Kin" a new sci-fi feature released in theaters this weekend. We round up coverage from around the web on the film and the journey of its creators, twin brothers Jonathan and Josh Baker.
A year ago, I released my film, The Thomas Beale Cipher, online. Since then, many have asked me 'what's next?' Certainly another film seemed like the obvious next step.
An old explorer close to freezing in the Arctic re-lives the events that brought him there in the first place.
As Agathe attends a rave, hoping for a reunion with her DJ ex-boyfriend, plastic bags come to life and start attacking the city and its inhabitants
Edmond is a small man whose life transforms when his co-workers crown him with paper donkey ears.
Ben Whishaw stars as a man walking a paper-thin line between profound joy and complete hopelessness in this powerful and challenging award-winning short film.