Reconversion

Reconversion

Release date : August 11, 2012
Runtime : 1h 8m
Countries of origin : Portugal /
Original Language : English / Portuguese /
Director : Thom Andersen /
Writers :
Production companies :
August 11, 2012 1h 8m Portugal Documentary English More
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Overview

With Reconversão (Reconversion), Thom Andersen opens another fascinating chapter of his ongoing investigation of architectural landscapes, their filmic representation, and their relation to history, by focusing on 17 buildings and projects by the often-controversial Portuguese architect Eduardo Souto de Moura—winner of the 2011 Pritzker Prize. Echoing Dziga Vertov’s concepts and Eadweard Muybridge’s techniques (shooting only one or two frames per second), Andersen masterfully brings forward what makes Souto de Moura an original: the incorporation of the passing of time into architectural designs, positing them within a history fraught with class struggle and societal changes, in a continuum with ruins—from which they may originate, and to which they will return—and with nature—which they frame, and by which they are framed.
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  • title:Reconversion
  • status:Released
  • Release date: 2012
  • Runtime:1h 8m
  • Genres: Documentary ·
  • Countries of origin: Portugal ·
  • Original Language: English · Portuguese ·
  • Director: Thom Andersen /
  • Writers:
  • Production companies:
  • Overview:With Reconversão (Reconversion), Thom Andersen opens another fascinating chapter of his ongoing investigation of architectural landscapes, their filmic representation, and their relation to history, by focusing on 17 buildings and projects by the often-controversial Portuguese architect Eduardo Souto de Moura—winner of the 2011 Pritzker Prize. Echoing Dziga Vertov’s concepts and Eadweard Muybridge’s techniques (shooting only one or two frames per second), Andersen masterfully brings forward what makes Souto de Moura an original: the incorporation of the passing of time into architectural designs, positing them within a history fraught with class struggle and societal changes, in a continuum with ruins—from which they may originate, and to which they will return—and with nature—which they frame, and by which they are framed.
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