
Film Archive
Jahr
Sections (Film Archive)
- A Declaration of Love to Polish Documentary Film (13)
- Animadoc (2)
- Animated to Buy (2)
- Animation Night Extended (1)
- Anniversary: Now and Then – Then and Now (4)
- Doc Alliance Selection (1)
- DOK im Knast (1)
- (-) FilmFestival Cottbus (1)
- German Competition (1)
- German Competition Short Film (1)
- Homage Brothers Quay (3)
- International Competition (2)
- International Competition Animadoc (2)
- International Competition Animated Film (9)
- International Competition Documentary Film (1)
- International Competition Short Documentary (2)
- International Competition Short Film (12)
- International Programme (17)
- Kids DOK (6)
- Late Harvest (1)
- Neue Deutsche Animation (1)
- Next Masters Competition (2)
- Polish Puppet Animation after 1945 (7)
- Post-Angst (1)
- Retrospective (23)
- Special Screening MDR (2)
- Strictly Animated (1)
- Witold Giersz (11)
- Young Cinema Competition (1)
Countries (Film Archive)


Crulic - The Path to Beyond
Credits
Anca Damian, Aparte Film
Anca Damian
Ilija Zogowski
Catalin Cristutiu
Anca Damian
This highly original animated documentary reconstructs the true (!) story of an individual who gets caught up in the wheels of the murderous European bureaucratic machine. The director illuminates the dark side of the system in her second feature-length production using various animation techniques: hand drawn images, photo collages, computer trickery, plasticine figures and occasional slightly modified stock footage. One particularly distinctive feature: the main protagonist narrates and reconstructs his own life and death similar to Joe Gillis (William Holden) in Billy Wilder’s legendary feature film SUNSET BOULEVARD (1950). When Daniel Claudiu Crulic (voiced by actor Vlad Ivanov) begins his tale, he has in fact already passed away. The thirty three year old Romanian died in 2008 in a Polish prison while on hunger strike, having been accused of a crime he couldn’t possibly have committed and then dismissed by the bureaucratic machine as worthless.
This sophisticated montage, combining imagery and audio, lends this ballad of the decay of humanity and the omnipotence of boundless greed a delightful rhythm and tremendous pull, from which emerges an in equal measure unsettling and harrowing warning: a Europe, in which public authorities and civil servants prefer to sidestep responsibilities and in which the individual doesn't count for anything, makes for a life not worth living.
– Peter Claus, Katalog Cottbus
This sophisticated montage, combining imagery and audio, lends this ballad of the decay of humanity and the omnipotence of boundless greed a delightful rhythm and tremendous pull, from which emerges an in equal measure unsettling and harrowing warning: a Europe, in which public authorities and civil servants prefer to sidestep responsibilities and in which the individual doesn't count for anything, makes for a life not worth living.
– Peter Claus, Katalog Cottbus