In Chinese Ink, composed from a series of shots taken with an iPhone, Salhab expands questions of location and the act of filmmaking itself. Some images were captured in the moment ‘without quite knowing why’, and others were filmed at an earlier time ‘with no apparent motive’ or as a result of specific circumstances. Salhab jotted down notes all along, excerpts from books he read or reread, sounds he recorded and preserved. He approached this film essay as a work in progress with no preconceived structure; instead, he let the work gradually reveal itself. All at once, in terms of ‘place’ and his relationship to ‘here’, with all its entanglements, it became clear to him that he needed to invoke the ‘elsewhere’, to start with the first place, his childhood in Senegal, and ‘retrace’ certain steps: his connection to armed struggles, the Palestinian cause, the present moment.
Ghassan Salhab
Director
Naqoyqatsi61%
Ex Libris: The New York Public Library64%
Burma VJ: Reporter i et lukket land72%
A Plastic Ocean75%
Heart of a Dog65%
Drew: The Man Behind the Poster69%
Woman77%
The Curious Birth of Benjamin Button69%
Listen to Britain62%
Champs63%
Downloaded64%
Emak-Bakia68%
The U.S. vs. John Lennon67%
Seduced and Abandoned62%
A Love Song for Latasha70%
The Class of ‘9271%
The Search for General Tso65%
We Live in Public68%
LA Originals69%