Lunatic Film Festival in Kunstraum p2p

6. June, from 21:00 and 7 June, 12:45 to 16:00

Benin Did Not Die She Sends Her Regards - David Odiase [+ discussion]
‚Benin Did Not Die She Sends Her Regards‘ is a poetry film produced as a deeply personal and political response to colonial misrepresentation, cultural erasure, and the urgent need for restitution.

Don’t Ask Me Anything - Aliyah Patillo [+ 15 discussion]
A young black woman strolls through the city center on her day off. Her thoughts often wander to the past. Here she finds herself in situations in which she was racially accosted or insulted. But today she does not helplessly surrender to her memories - as a self-drawn comic heroine, she fights back.

Pétalos de Flor - Mariana Barberena
A Mexican girl named Michelle. Through her story with Anorexia, the documentary invites reflection on the stigmas imposed by this patriarchal society towards the perception of the human body, metaphorically illustrated with nature.

jazz up chiang mai - Christopher Venzky-Stalling
this documentary offers a glimpse into a multicultural city, chiang mai, that dances to its own tune and embodies the improvisational spirit of jazz.

Common Grounds - Jaron Kühmstedt
Common Grounds gives personal insights into growing up and living in Hong Kong and in a way also serves as a memento of my time there and the people I met.

SÓLO POR UNA NOCHE - Leonardo Marín Núñez
A friend told me about Emma Yesica, the protagonist of the documentary, so I went to see her at the Museo del Chopo where she talked about some of her experiences as a trans woman and vedette.

Paisajes Emocionales - Mariana López Hernández
Paisajes Emocionales explores memory through narrative elements of fiction and film essay. Without a protagonist, a narrator guides us through memories, desires and family ties, highlighting the chaotic nature of memory and life itself.

ADDITIONALLY: many faces (cesco.blz music video) - Ricardo Souza
This song and movie is about different identities that we all carry within us. It’s about the sides we try to hide from ourselves and especially from others and the relationship to reality that shifts depending on the face we are wearing.