Announcing 2022 Opening Night Film

Ana Vaz’s É Noite na América (It is Night in America) will open the 12th edition of Open City Documentary Festival on Wednesday 7 September at Curzon Soho.

 

“Midnight blue. The creatures return to the city. They nest in the parking lots. They glorify the inhabitants’ garbage in a nocturnal feast that escapes the tyranny of the sun, the monuments, the roads, the edifications. Animalistic spell cast against the empire of death in the dead of the American night: time that turns day into night.”

– Ana Vaz

 

Filmed in the zoo of Brasília, home to hundreds of species rescued in the city (giant anteaters, maned wolves, owls, wood foxes, capybaras, caracaras…), É noite na América is a reverse ethnography that foregrounds the non-human perspective of animals – those original inhabitants of a city that was dreamt for the future but built on a legacy of violence and displacement. As a headline in the local newspaper reads: “are animals invading our cities, or rather, are we occupying their habitat?” Vaz returns to the subject of her native Brasília (which she explored in early films such as Sacris Pulso and A Idade da Pedra) and furthers her ongoing project of subverting the traditional power dynamics between filmmaker, camera and filmed subject – and between sound and image. The animals, a vital presence in many of Vaz’s films, are not only the subjects of our gaze; they too are watching us. Blue is the dominant colour; the underexposure a result of working with old and expired 16mm film, and also an allusion to the “day for night” technique which in French is called “nuit américaine” (“American night”), because of its prevalence in low-budget American movies, particularly westerns. É noite na América  is a nocturnal western that blurs perspectives.

Ana Vaz (1986, Brazil) is an artist and filmmaker who works with cinema as a tool. Her films, or rather her film-poems, travel through territories and events haunted by the perennial consequences of internal and external forms of colonialism, and their footprints on the earth as well as on human and non-human forms. Her practice also inclues writing, critical pedagogy, installations, film programs or ephemeral events, which are expansions or developments of her films.

É noite na América will have its world premiere at the 75th Locarno Film Festival in August, where it competes in the ‘Concorso Cineasti del presente’ section.

We are delighted to have É noite na América open the 12th edition of Open City Documentary Festival for what will be its UK premiere.

Tickets for the screening will be available to purchase after our full programme launch on 27 July.