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Hommage: Želimir Žilnik

During the sixty years of his career, Želimir Žilnik has created more than seventy films. He is one of the few still active filmmakers of the Yugoslav New Wave – the so-called Black Wave. His opus and broad audio-visual analysis embody an insightful cinematic chronicle of modern Europe that Žilnik obstinately and consistently maps and explores through his work, which makes him one of the key personas of the political and socially-engaged cinema. In the beginning of his Camera politica, Emmanuel Barot asks whether a political (in a broader sense also socially-critical) film is a film assigned with social and ideological struggle, if it tries to use image and sound to tell the truth about the world and about the fate of the working class subdued to accompanying processes of physical and spiritual destruction, about the fate of minorities etc. – does it then have to be defined with its ‘representative’ mission, its faithfulness to the reality. According to Žilnik, a film does not depend on reality as such but on filmmaker’s transformation of reality: “The only inexhaustible film subject is such that pertains to the relationship between individual fates and society in general. The documentary impulse may especially strongly convey the general care for people’s fates. The responsibility of a film should stretch beyond bare recording of actuality, into exploring, analysing, inquiring, and also enthusing of the audiences.”

Prizor iz filma. Moški na peronu, za njim je vlak.

Farewell

Želimir Žilnik , West Germany, documentary, 1975, 9'

Prizor iz filma. Stavba z okni iz katerih gledajo ven ljudje.

House Orders

Želimir Žilnik , West Germany, documentary, 1975, 12'

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Želimir Žilnik, West Germany, documentary, 1975, 9'

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Želimir Žilnik, West Germany, documentary, 1974, 10’