Vanishing Waves

Vanishing Waves (originally titled Aurora) is a 2012 film directed by Kristina Buožytė.[1][2]

Vanishing Waves
Directed byKristina Buožytė
Produced byIeva Norviliene
Written byKristina Buožytė
Bruno Samper
StarringMarius Jampolskis
Jurga Jutaitė
Rudolfas Jansonas
Vytautas Kaniušonis
Music byPeter Von Poehl
CinematographyFeliksas Abrukauskas
Edited bySuzanne Fenn
Production
company
Tremora
Release date
  • 3 July 2012 (2012-07-03) (Karlovy Vary)
Running time
120 minutes
CountryLithuania
France
Belgium
LanguageLithuanian

Plot summary

Scientists conduct an experiment in which the mind of a conscious man is electronically linked with that of a comatose young woman. The youthful male volunteer initially conceals the fantastic success of the linkage because of its explicitly sexual nature. As the contacts continue the young couple's inner experiences together become increasingly varied and complex. Inevitably, the male volunteer is compelled to attempt a rescue. His goal then is to sacrifice his idyllic inner existence with the beautiful girl by leading her back into the outer world.

Cast

Reception

The film received a special mention at the 2012 Karlovy Vary International Film Festival.[3]

gollark: Well, I paid £100 for the primary server node™.
gollark: I could buy ten osmarks.tk™ server nodes™ with that!
gollark: Even my dirt-cheap phone has an octacore SoC, and while it has half the clockrate of my laptop's CPU and uses some old ARM cores, newer phone CPUs go up to *ten* cores for some reason, can (very briefly, I assume) reach 3GHz, and have better IPC.
gollark: Unless you really like gaming on your phone for some reason, but stop doing that. Or unless you need really good cameras, but there are comparatively cheap ones with good-enough ones.
gollark: yes.

References

  1. Brian Clark (15 September 2012). "L'Etrange 2012 Review: VANISHING WAVES is the Erotic Sci-Fi Drama of the Year!". Twitch. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
  2. "Vanishing Waves". kviff.com. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
  3. Wendy Mitchell (8 July 2012). "Karlovy Vary's Crystal Globe goes to The Almost Man". Screen Daily. Retrieved 15 September 2012.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.