My Name Is Oona

alle Plakate
Kurzfilme
USA, 1969, 10 min

Inhalte(1)

‘My name is Oona,’ says the little girl at the beginning of the film and she will repeat it in a loop throughout the movie. ‘Oona’ means: the unique one, the fairy queen. She’s the daughter of filmmaker Gunvor Nelson, who observes her at play in My Name is Oona while reflecting to a certain extent on her own childhood. We experience Oona in her social surroundings, with her friends, fighting, riding horses. Using a wide array of recording, developing and editing techniques, Nelson reduces the action to the essential, lending the film an expressionist touch. As such, it is never about depicting a realistic representation of a syrupy childhood, but instead about the abstraction of childhood itself. Oona rattles off the days of the week aloud. A male voice interrupts her list, frustrating Oona’s system and her reasoning. Oona only lets herself be side-tracked for a second, then she’s back at it again. Steve Reich, who produced the soundtrack for the film, loops the signals, creating an acoustic counterpart to the concrete situations. The chirping of a bird can be heard, a woman singing softly, perhaps a lullaby, familiar. Oona keeps going. (Berlinale)

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