Man From Tomorrow

Man From Tomorrow

Release date : January 1, 2014
Runtime : 40m
Countries of origin : France /
Original Language : French /
Director : Jacqueline Caux /
Writers : Jacqueline Caux /
Production companies : Axis Records /
January 1, 2014 40m France French More
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Overview

The film is by Jacqueline Caux, a French director whose work often touches on experimenters in modern and contemporary music, including the 2007 Detroit techno documentary The Cycles Of The Mental Machine. According to the press release, her latest film is less a straightforward profile of the inventive Detroiter than an impressionistic piece that draws on the mood and thematic underpinnings of his work. Man From Tomorrow is divided into two parts: the first part sets images to Mills' exclusive score for the film and features no dialog, and the second uses quotes pulled from interviews the director conducted with him. The director says there's no straightforward narrative or message in the film, though we should expect lots of the sci-fi futurism we've come to expect from Mills; as she puts it, "I wanted to give free reign to the viewer’s subjective impressions and physical sensations."
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Documentary
  • title:Man From Tomorrow
  • status:Released
  • Release date: 2014
  • Runtime:40m
  • Genres:
  • Countries of origin: France ·
  • Original Language: French ·
  • Director: Jacqueline Caux /
  • Writers: Jacqueline Caux ·
  • Production companies: Axis Records ·
  • Overview:The film is by Jacqueline Caux, a French director whose work often touches on experimenters in modern and contemporary music, including the 2007 Detroit techno documentary The Cycles Of The Mental Machine. According to the press release, her latest film is less a straightforward profile of the inventive Detroiter than an impressionistic piece that draws on the mood and thematic underpinnings of his work. Man From Tomorrow is divided into two parts: the first part sets images to Mills' exclusive score for the film and features no dialog, and the second uses quotes pulled from interviews the director conducted with him. The director says there's no straightforward narrative or message in the film, though we should expect lots of the sci-fi futurism we've come to expect from Mills; as she puts it, "I wanted to give free reign to the viewer’s subjective impressions and physical sensations."
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