-22.7°C

  • Jan Kounen
  • France
  • 2019
  • 8 min
  • Immersive
  • Dutch Premiere
  • DocLab Domesticating Reality, IDFA DocLab Spotlight, DocLab Program

French music producer Molécule is the pioneer of “nomadic electronic music.” Following on from his debut album 60°43’ Nord, for which he spent 34 days on an Atlantic fishing trawler, he went to Greenland to make -22.7°C. Starting out from a remote Inuit village, he went on various trips to glaciers and fjords where he used his “survival elektrokit” to record environmental sounds such as howling wind, loud crackling deep in the Arctic ice, and the crunch of snow. He then processed the sounds and mixed them into beats.

The 360-degree video accompanying Molécule’s new album reinforces the physicality of the music. It can be experienced in the VR or dome version. The landscape we hear is like a living organism, and the experience is even more direct and realistic when we’re a passenger in a dinghy or dogsled. Then the moment comes when the sounds punch a hole through the veneer of reality and take us to another level, deep beneath the ice and up into the firmament, to feel the caress of the Northern Lights.

This project is a 360-degree experience.

Credits

  • 8 min
  • Spoken languages: English, French
Created by
Jan Kounen, Molecule, Amaury La Burthe
Director
Jan Kounen
Production
Guillaume de la Boulaye for Zorba Production, Marianne Lévy-Leblond for ARTE, Amaury La Burthe for Novelab, Coline Delbaere for DVgroup
Sound Design
Amaury La Burthe
World Sales
Paul Bouchard for Diversion cinema

IDFA history

2019
Dutch Premiere
DocLab Domesticating Reality
IDFA DocLab Spotlight
DocLab Program

Browse the collection

470/479 results

Share this film

Print this page

IDFA history

This website uses cookies.

By using cookies we can measure how our site is used, how it can be further improved and to personalize the content of online advertisements.

Read
 here everything about our cookie policy. If you choose to decline, we only place functional and analytical cookies