“AUTONOME” By MADA MADA

The short film IN MEDIAS RUSH is an experimental cinematic journey into the depths of a manic mind. A poetic retro-sci-fi narrative unfolded in a string of unsettling tableaus that encapsulates the male protagonist’s ambiguous feelings about his birthday. While balancing between realities in his silent struggle with severe mental illness, we plunge into the film at a neatly orchestrated birthday party. The protagonist is accompanied by his girlfriend, and they are drinking cocoa on the couch in their mutual home. The setting breathes pure perfection, but through the voice over we sense that another reality is soon to be revealed. With one foot on the accelerator, he is heading towards the edge. The thematic focal point of IN MEDIAS RUSH is mental health problems among young adults, and the social/personal consequences related to the existing taboo on the subject. The film wishes to formulate an honest cinematic space in which words, sound, and image artistically interprets and articulates some of the perspectives related to especially bipolar, anxiety, and psychotic disorders. IN MEDIAS RUSH was nominated in the category 'Best Danish Short Film' at Copenhagen Short Film Festival in 2020. Original title: IN MEDIAS RÆS Directed by: Esben Persson -------------------- DK: IN MEDIAS RÆS IN MEDIAS RÆS er en filmisk rejse ind i dybderne af et manisk sind. En ung mand fejrer sin fødselsdag, mens hans tanker tordner afsted. Med en uvillig fod på speederen har han kurs mod kanten. FR: IN MEDIA RES IN MEDIA RES est un voyage dans les profondeurs d’un esprit maniaque. Un jeune homme fête son anniversaire tandis que ses pensées se multiplient. Malgré lui, il se dirige vers un point de non-retour. -------------------- Cast: Peter Alexander Bach & Amanda Overby Drew Director // Script writer // Set designer // Costume designer // Editor // Speaker: Esben Persson Photographer // Editor: Lasse Mølsted Producer: Latifa Lykke Ben Mabrouk Assistant producer: Cecilie Creutsberg Music composer: Martin Bejder Sound designer: Mads Hye Chief Lighting Technician: Rasmus Bruun Liboriussen VFX: Jonas Fonnesbæk Lodahl Colorist: Kristopher Paterson Graphic designer: Jakob Toft Kristensen -------------------- Shot on RED Monstro 8K with Lomo Squarefront Anamorphics.

Synopsis

Montreal, 1954. An exiled author is thrown into a dance with his inner demons. Shaken by the unwavering tides of his life, a gentle touch comes to mind.


Directors statement

“Autonome” tells the tale of a self-exiled artist who’s crumbling under the weight of solitude. Set in 1954, we follow a man who abandoned everything in favor of pursuing his artistic dreams in “the big city” of Montreal. Far from the warm embrace of his loved ones at a time when communication was burdensome and with the advent of the seasonal winds of depression, the walls of isolation begin to close in on him and scrape at his soul.  

Although isolation, depression and loneliness have become all-too familiar feelings due COVID-19 and the misery left in its wake, “Autonome” was conceived a year prior to our current predicament. The thought that this story of self-doubt, lost love and broken dreams rings so true today is both coincidental and a testament to the universality of its themes.

As a filmmaker, my yearning to create immersive narrative experiences perfectly complemented Mada Mada’s vision, who himself is a film composer. From our very first meeting, we knew what we were about to do: a short film wrapped within a music video.

“Autonome” opens with a contemporary dance void of any musical attributes. The dance represents the character’s frustrations, loss of control, anxiety and the suffocating nostalgia once solitude turns into illness. By hearing the skin tearing, the breathing cracking, the feet stomping and the character’s held-back screams, we show his body broken in lieu of his broken psyche. This is a physical piece; one where every movement is a memory, a mistake, a regret or even a tragedy. Complementing the body’s expressionist poetry, the thunderous storm that materializes inside the artist’s space suggests the severity of Seasonal Affective Disorder on a mind adrift; itself represented by a gradual deterioration of the ship in a bottle.

Cinematography maestro Graham GS and I opted to maintain a grounded camera language throughout for a more intimate presentation of the artist. It’s only once his body begins to speak that the camera finds its freedom on steadicam, a technique that further connects us to the character as he wrestles with his inner demons.

Credits

Directed by Alexandre Richard

Music written and performed by Mada Mada

Dancer, Choregrapher & Actor: Charles-Alexis Desgagnés

Production Team: Les Orphelins
Cinematographer: Graham GS
Producers: Graham GS, Alexe Laroche, Alexander Bain
Screenwriter: Alexandre Richard
Artistic Director: Veronique Duplain
Make up artist: Alexe Laroche
1st AC: Jonathan Auger
1st AD : Alexe Laroche
Key Grip: Maxime Latraverse
Sound Recording: Maxime Bélanger

Production Assistants:
Laurie-Anne Perreault, Émilie Beaumier, César Marchena, Antoine Parle, Dylan Bernier, Valérie Leroy-Pleshoyano, Maxime Bélanger 

On set Photographer: David Gogan
Extra: Sophie Belleau


Editing: Alexandre Richard
Sound Design & Mix: Kristopher Laflamme
Color Grading Studio: Outpost
Colorist: Martin Gaumond
VFX by: AA Studios
VFX supervisor: Marc Hall
Coordination: Moona Marsolais
VFX Artists: Jonathan Cyr, Vincent Campbell, Jérémy Berger


Special Thanks:
Cinepool, MTL Grande Camera, AA Studios, Outpost, ABX Studios, Nicole Arrage, Samuël L. Härtl, Kiril Schimdov, Guillaume Claveau, Marc-André Lavoie, DJ Matrundola, India Katherine Jones.

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