Le Silence des sirènes

Le Silence des sirènes (2019) (French, Créole, English dialogues with English/French subtitles)

34 mins, Super 16mm, Color, 1.66:1, 5.1 Surround Sound Mix

Selections: Berlinale Forum Expanded 2019, Ammodo Tiger Shorts Competition - International Film Festival Rotterdam 2019, Oberhausen Kurzfilmtage 2019, Toronto Images Festival 2021, Camden International Film Festival 2021, Uppsala Short Film Festival 2021.

Distribution : Collectif Jeune Cinéma, Arsenal Berlin

With: Céline Karter (Céline), Jordan Mezence (Hypnotist), Noëlla Carpaye (Grandmother), David Kidman (Sound Engineer).

Written and directed by Diana Vidrascu, Cinematography Diana Vidrascu, Editing Diana Vidrascu, Music Paul Régimbeau (Mondkopf), Sound design Diana Vidrascu, Sound mix Romain Poirier. Production Diana Vidrascu

SYNOPSIS:

Inspired by Kafka’s short text “The Silence of the Sirens”, which reinterprets Homer’s deadly songstresses as silent apparitions, the film focuses on a fictionalized portrait of Céline, an actress from Martinique. Living in Paris and struggling to find her place in the world, she goes on a quest of identity back to her roots.

Highlighting the idea of cultural memory, Silence of the Sirens questions the commodification of images and the void they generate in the absence of a governing structure. The metaphorical silence of Céline relates to her inability to identify with the two cultures she inhabits, but also with the commercial representations she embodies in her work. The contrast between natural and artificial environments reflects the multiple personifications of the sirens’ myth – Céline oscillates between the image of an alluring siren and the very object of the sirens’ deceptive song.
The myth is cinematographically sublimated through an exercise in translation and appropriation. The islands are navigated from the original Greek poem through Kafka’s prose to a literary French translation and a text performance in Creole, ceasing in an improvised poetic translation.