Film Archive

Jahr

Land (Film Archive)

Camera Lucida 2023
Filmstill Feet in Water, Head on Fire
Feet in Water, Head on Fire
Terra Long
In southern California, date palms from the Middle East grow, tales from One Thousand and One Nights are told and a volcanic eruption is expected. A document of enchanting simultaneity.
Filmstill Feet in Water, Head on Fire

Feet in Water, Head on Fire

Feet in Water, Head on Fire
Terra Long
Camera Lucida 2023
Documentary Film
USA,
Canada
2023
90 minutes
Spanish,
English
Subtitles: 
English

Not a single cloud ever seems to drift across this sky, the sun never ceases to send its powerful rays down. Here, in southern California, where the San Andreas Fault has created an unmistakable topography and invisible water currents run under the barren soil, date palms thrive best: feet in water, head on fire. Terra Long has looked around, traced the history of the plants which originally came to North America from the Middle East, and visited the parades and festivities dedicated to the sugary fruit. Layer by layer, she constructs her very own perspective on the landscape and the people, translates her haptic impressions into magnificent 16mm shots and designs a complex soundtrack.

Long manages to join the past and present and produce a concise, quasi sensual extract. The laborious manual pollination of the date palms plays a role in it, as do the collapsed ecosystem of the Salton Sea, archived dresses of Arabian Nights beauty queens and interviews that testify only to what is now historical; as do elderly white couples floating in their pools and walking across the lawns of golf courses. “Feet in Water, Head on Fire” is a document of simultaneity that captivates from the first minute to the last.

Carolin Weidner

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Terra Long
Cinematographer
Terra Long
Editor
Kaija Siirala, Terra Long
Producer
Terra Long, Mireya Martinez, Sharlene Bamboat
Sound Design
Richy Carey
Camera Lucida 2022
Filmstill Foragers
Foragers
Jumana Manna
The battle of the herbs: Collecting edible plants is a political issue in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, with economical, ecological and cultural implications.
Filmstill Foragers

Foragers

Al-yad al-khadra
Jumana Manna
Camera Lucida 2022
Documentary Film
2022
63 minutes
Arabic,
Hebrew
Subtitles: 
English

The herb dispute, in this case about ’Akkoub (gundelia) and Za’atar (wild thyme) is one of the more bizarre aspects of the Middle East conflict. These plants are much sought-after ingredients of Palestinian cuisine and have been collected for generations; for reasons of nature conservation, however, this is forbidden in the West Bank. Israeli park rangers thus find themselves in hot pursuit of their collectors for a fistful of greens. Jumana Manna humorously presents the poaching as civil disobedience.

The Berlin-based Palestinian artist combines documentary and scripted material with pop references. Once, when archival footage illustrates the hype surrounding the illegal herbs, we hear Jefferson Airplane’s “White Rabbit” and Morricone’s harmonica melody from “For a Few Dollars More”. The ban also has an economic side, since Israeli companies are selling Za’atar as a spice mix. Drone and panoramic shots suggest the absurd manhunt for elderly people picking for their own needs. One of them says: “I’ll also be caught in 2050 with my children and grandchildren.” Manna wrote the court hearings based on real cases with lawyer Rabea Eghbarieh. Not mentioned in the film is the political success the attorney of the Adalah NGO contributed to in 2019: According to the new directive of the Ministry of the Environment five kilogrammes of the plants may be picked.
Jan-Philipp Kohlmann

Credits DOK Leipzig Logo

Director
Jumana Manna
Script
Jumana Manna, Rabea Eghbarieh
Cinematographer
Marte Vold, Ashraf Dowani, Yaniv Linton
Editor
Katrin Ebersohn, Jumana Manna
Producer
Jumana Manna
Co-Producer
Eyal Vexler
Sound
Montaser Abu 'Alul
Score
Rashad Becker
Nominated for: Film Prize Leipziger Ring