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Press

2020-12-15

Co-Presented by the Hong Kong Arts Centre and Goethe-Institut Hongkong — Machines Like Us: Desires and Technology in German Cinema 7-10/1/2021 @Louis Koo Cinema, HKAC

Co-Presented by the Hong Kong Arts Centre and Goethe-Institut Hongkong
Machines Like Us: Desires and Technology in German Cinema
January 7 – 10, 2021
Louis Koo Cinema, Hong Kong Arts Centre
Tickets are available at Hong Kong Movie 6 now.

Co-Presented by the Hong Kong Arts Centre and Goethe-Institut Hongkong, moving image programme Machines Like Us: Desires and Technology in German Cinema takes place at the Louis Koo Cinema, Hong Kong Arts Centre from 7 to 10 January 2021. Since the invention of the first stone tools nearly two million years ago up to the present digital era, technology has always been the means that humans use to fulfill desires, obtain resources, modify the world and explore possibilities. Film is also one of the means - by cinematically realising imaginations and establishing human connections. Co-presented by the Hong Kong Arts Centre and Goethe-Institut Hongkong, this film showcase serves as an introduction to German science fiction films from the 1920s up till now, and encourages our audience to observe how technologies have evolved over time in cinema and in our greater world to meet human desires. This programme involves discourses on gender, politics, society, culture and other areas over the course of history. While it traces how the ancient dream of creation connects with today’s world, it also illustrates how the human condition and our surroundings have been shaped by technological innovations.

The Golem: How He Came into the World is based on a Jewish folklore, Rabbi Lowe, a magician and master of the Black Art, wants to prevent the persecution of his Jewish people, and creates a giant warrior, the golem, to protect their safety. Commissioned by Goethe-Institut Hongkong, Berlin-based DJ and electronic music composer Jan Brauer will accompany this classic silent movie with a contemporary score. Metropolis depicts the vast gulf that separates classes by describing the future city where humans and robots coexist. The film was one of the most monumental and expensive films of Germany and is among the first features of the sci-fi genre. The story of World on a Wire takes place in the future. The government has a simulation project called Simulacron, which includes an artificial world with over 9,000 identity units who live as avatars that believe themselves to be real people. The technical director of the programme dies in a mystery accident. His successor, Fred Stiller, becomes suspicious of a massive corporate and governmental conspiracy, and starts to wonder about his own humanity and the “real world”. In the Dust of the Stars tells the story of the spaceship Cyrno lands on the planet TEM4 after receiving its call for help, but the Temers deny the call. As commander Akala prepares the spaceship to leave, the ruler of TEM4 invites her and the crew to a lush party. Not only do the opulent food and the seductive dancers cloud their minds, there are also drugs to brainwash them. Only navigator Suko is left behind on the spaceship, and he makes a terrible discovery. Hi, AI portrays two stories about humans and artificially intelligent robots. In the US, Chuck is lonely and picks up a robot girlfriend, Harmony, who is programmed for empathy and compliments. In Japan, grandmother Sakurai is given the childlike robot, Pepper, by her son, so she is less alone. How will we live together with artificial intelligence?

Dr Derek Lam and Professor Dr Gordon Cheng will attend the pre-screening introduction and after-screening talk of Metropolis and Hi, AI to share their insights in the relationship between human desires and intelligent technology in German cinema. Conducted in Cantonese or English. For more programme details, please see below.

For further details, please refer to the information below. For press tickets, interviews or further information, please contact Ms. Zoe Tsang (Tel: +852 2582 0215) of the HKAC.

Machines Like Us: Desires and Technology in German Cinema

The Golem: How He Came into the World
Director: Paul Wegener, Carl Boese
Music: Jan Brauer

The dangerous contradictions created by tyranny

Date & Time: 7/1/2021 (Thu) 7:30pm*
*DJ Jan Brauer will attend the after-screening talk. Conducted in English.
Germany | 1920 | 76 mins | Silent with score | DCP | B&W

Suffering under an absolute monarchy in Prague in the 1600s, Rabbi Lowe, a magician and master of the Black Art, wants to prevent the persecution of his Jewish people, and creates a giant warrior, the golem, to protect their safety. The golem is sculpted of clay and animated by the spirit of Astaroth, and is a seemingly indestructible juggernaut with superpower, performing acts of great heroism, yet equally capable of dreadful violence. When the rabbi’s assistant takes control of the golem and attempts to use him for selfish gain, the golem evades human influence...

This finely rendered expressionist work of unleashed desire and potential damnation is based on a Jewish folklore. Co-director, Paul Wegener, plays the golem. The film was one of the most successful German silent film productions, both artistically and financially. Despite its bleakness, The Golem still bursts with brightness and hope, and is a masterpiece of German horror cinema. Commissioned by Goethe-Institut Hongkong, Berlin-based DJ and electronic music composer Jan Brauer will accompany this classic silent movie with a contemporary score.

About the score composer
Jan Brauer is a DJ from Berlin as well as an electronic music composer. He co-founded the group Brandt Brauer Frick in 2009 who has made appearances at festivals such as Coachella, Glastonbury, and Haldern Pop. Jan also works on crossover-projects with classical music, theatre and films. In 2017, Brauer composed a new film music score for Sergei Eisenstein’s classic 1925 silent movie Battleship Potemkin and was premiered to a full house of enthusiastic audience at the Hong Kong Arts Centre.

Metropolis
Director: Fritz Lang

Special Award, New York Film Critics Circle Awards 2002
Nominated for Best International Film, Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films (USA) 2011

Between the head and the hands must be the heart

Date & Time: 8/1/2021 (Fri) 7:30pm*
*With introduction by Dr. Derek Lam. Conducted in Cantonese.

Germany | 1925/26 | 149 mins | In German with English subtitles | DCP | B&W

In the city of the future, Metropolis, Joh Fredersen rules it from high above while the workers are non-stop plodding underground. Fredersens' son Freder falls in love with Maria, the workers' leader. At the same time, Rotwang, the inventor, creates a steel robot and is instructed by Fredersen to model it after Maria. The fake Maria then instigates the workers who leave their machines and thus cause the flooding of the city. How to overcome the vast gulf that separates classes and bring people together?

Metropolis was one of the most monumental and expensive films of Germany and is among the first features of the sci-fi genre. Inspired by the New York skyline, the film is a canvas of futuristic and dystopic extravaganza, which also embodies director Fritz Lang’s trailblazing ambition in filmmaking.

World on a Wire
Director: Rainer Werner Fassbinder

Honourable Mention (Television Play), Adolf Grimme Awards, Germany 1974
Berlin International Film Festival 2010
Melbourne International Film Festival 2010

A trippy race between humans and the machines

Date & Time: 9/1/2021 (Sat) 2:30pm

West Germany | 1973 | 212 mins | In German with English subtitles | DCP | Colour

In the future, the government has a simulation project called Simulacron, which includes an artificial world with over 9,000 identity units who live as avatars that believe themselves to be real people. The technical director of the programme dies in a mystery accident. His successor, Fred Stiller, becomes suspicious of a massive corporate and governmental conspiracy, and starts to wonder about his own humanity and the “real world”. Meanwhile, one of the identity units in the simulation attempts suicide.

In World on a Wire, director Rainer Werner Fassbinder’s wild wired dystopia is gloriously cracked and boundlessly inventive. The epic demonstrates that sci-fi is a genre that is fit for Fassbinder-esque paranoid-existential interrogation and romantic vision. This is the director’s only work of sci-fi which he made at the age of 27, and was originally aired as a two-part television serial in 1968.

In the Dust of the Stars
Director: Gottfried Kolditz

Who’s suffering from the winner’s curse?

Date & Time: 9/1/2021 (Sat) 8pm

East Germany | 1976 | 95 mins | In German with English subtitles | DCP | Colour

After a six-year journey, the spaceship Cyrno lands on the planet TEM4 after receiving its call for help, but the Temers deny the call. As commander Akala prepares the spaceship to leave, the ruler of TEM4 invites her and the crew to a lush party. Not only do the opulent food and the seductive dancers cloud their minds, there are also drugs to brainwash them. Only navigator Suko is left behind on the spaceship, and he makes a terrible discovery.

Sometimes referred to as the “East German Barbarella”, In the Dust of the Stars is deemed one of the most imaginative films of East German cinema. It was co-produced with Romania by the state-owned studio, DEFA (Deutsche Film-Aktiengesellschaft), and is the last of the studio’s four outer-space films. The cast was heralded from different eastern European countries. Director Gottfried Kolditz started his career in making musicals and In the Dust of the Stars is a feast for the eyes.

Hi, AI
Director: Isabella Willinger

Best Documentary, Max Ophüls Prize Film Festival 2019
Nominated for Best Documentary, German Film Awards 2019
Nominated for NEXT:WAVE Award and Politiken's Audience Award, CPH:DOX 2019
International Documentary Filmfestival Amsterdam 2019

A robotic goal to love humans?

Date & Time: 10/1/2021 (Sun) 3pm*
*Professor Dr Gordon Cheng and Dr Derek Lam will attend the after-screening talk. Conducted in English.

Germany | 2018 | 90 mins | In English, German, Japanese Italian, with English subtitles | DCP | Colour

Humanoid robots are the new creatures. While scientists agonise over the philosophical questions surrounding artificial intelligence, robots are filling roles as receptionists, domestic workers, sex objects and others. In the US, Chuck is lonely and picks up a robot girlfriend, Harmony, who is programmed for empathy and compliments. In Japan, grandmother Sakurai is given the childlike robot, Pepper, by her son, so she is less alone.

While robotics is the future, Hi, AI provokes important moral and existential questions: How will we live together with machine learning and artificial intelligence? What will we win and what will we lose? And, who are the main characters in the new world? The interactions in the film bring about humorous moments, and many revealing hints too. We might come to realise that we can discover deeply human traits in the new artificial lifeforms.

About the speakers
Dr Derek Lam
Dr Derek Lam teaches film as a lecturer at the University of Hong Kong.  He has worked for the Hong Kong International Film Festival (most recently on its retrospective of late Godard), Macau's Cinemateca Paixão, and the New York Film Festival.  He obtained his MFA degree in film directing at Columbia University and his PhD in Comparative Literature at the University of Hong Kong.

Professor Dr Gordon Cheng
Dr Gordon Cheng has made pioneering contributions in humanoid robotics, neuroengineering, artificial intelligence for the past 20 years. Since 2010, Dr Cheng has been holding the Chair for Cognitive Systems, which he also founded. The Chair for Cognitive Systems is part of the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Technical University of Munich (TUM), Munich/Germany.

Screening Schedule

7/1Thu

8/1Fri

9/1Sat

10/1Sun

 

 

2:30pm
In the Dust of the Stars

 

 

 

 

3pm
Hi, AI
(With after-screening talk)

7:30pm
The Golem: How He Came into the World (With after-screening talk)

7:30pm
Metropolis
(With introduction)

 

 

 

 

8pm
World on a Wire

 


Machines Like Us: Desires and Technology in German Cinema
Date: 7-10/1/2021
Venue: Louis Koo Cinema, Hong Kong Arts Centre

Tickets are now available at Hong Kong Movie 6! Book NOW: https://bit.ly/375yDOU

Individual tickets: $80 / $64*
*For each screening, 20% off for each purchase of 4 or more standard tickets.
*20% off discount for full-time students, senior citizens aged 60 or above, people with disabilities and the minder and Comprehensive Social Security Assistance (CSSA) recipients. Tickets for CSSA recipients available on a first-come-first-served basis. Concessionary ticket holders must produce evidence of their identity or age upon admission.
*20% off discount to Goethe-Institut Hongkong’s students with a valid discount letter.

Mobile ticketing app booking: Hong Kong Movie (Android & iPhone versions)
Ticketing enquiries: 3728 2566 (10:00-19:00 Weekdays)
Internet booking: https://bit.ly/375yDOU

 

Machines Like Us: Desires and Technology in German Cinema@Louis Koo Cinema, HKAC
Co-presenters: Hong Kong Arts Centre and Goethe-Institut Hongkong
Details: https://hkac.org.hk/calendar_detail/?u=iqSRexJKmzs
Image Download: http://ftp.hkac.org.hk/MDD/Machines_Like_Us/
Trailer: http://ftp.hkac.org.hk/MDD/Machines_Like_Us/Trailer.mp4

Hong Kong Arts Centre Moving Images
Facebook: www.facebook.com/hkartscentremovingimages/
Instagram: www.instagram.com/hongkongartscentremovingimages/
Website: www.hkac.org.hk
Programme enquiries: 2582 0203

 

About Hong Kong Arts Centre (HKAC)
The Hong Kong Arts Centre is a multi-arts centre that fosters artistic exchanges locally and internationally, bringing the most forward creations to Hong Kong and showcasing homegrown talents abroad. The HKAC stimulates innovation and promotes creativity. Being Hong Kong’s only independent non-profit multi-arts institution, the HKAC offers exhibitions, screenings and performances, connecting the arts of Hong Kong to the rest of the world through programmes and collaborations. Come to the HKAC to experience, appreciate, learn and be inspired by arts.

Hong Kong Arts CentreMedia Enquiry
Annie Ho
Marketing & Development Director
Tel: 2824 5306 / 9481 8706
Email: aho@hkac.org.hk
Zoe Tsang
Marketing & Development Officer
Tel: 2582 0215
Email: ztsang@hkac.org.hk
Jacqueline Tong
Project Manager
Tel: 2582 0247
Email: jtong@hkac.org.hk