Victor Kossakovsky on Gunda, Respecting Nature, and Filmmaking Ethics | NYFF58

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  • čas přidán 18. 09. 2020
  • Programmer Rachel Rosen is joined by director Victor Kossakovsky to discuss his remarkable, heartbreaking documentary Gunda, which uses natural sound design and crisp, pastoral black-and-white cinematography to immerse the viewer in the compassionate tale of a sow who lives on a farm in Norway. The director discusses respecting nature, ethical considerations, how filmmaking is a powerful tool, the toll humanity has taken on the world, his unique approach to cinematography, and much more.
    Get tickets for tonight’s nationwide virtual tickets, with streaming ending at midnight: www.filmlinc.org/films/gunda/
    Gunda is a sow who lives on a farm in Norway. When documentary filmmaker Victor Kossakovsky first visits her, she has just given birth to a litter of piglets, and his patient camera watches as they grasp for her milk and take their tentative, teetering steps into a new world. This remarkable intimacy extends and evolves, building into an unprecedented portrait of animal life-encompassing herds of cows and curious, uncooped chickens-that brings us uncommonly close to these creatures, and manages to express their consciousness without overtly anthropomorphizing them. Entirely wordless, Gunda boasts immersive natural sound design and crisp, pastoral black-and-white cinematography to tell its compassionate tale; like all of Kossakovsky’s work (¡Vivan las Antípodas!, Aquarela), it’s visionary in its simplicity, wonder, and urgency. A NEON release.
    Presented by Film at Lincoln Center, the 58th New York Film Festival highlights the best in world cinema from September 17-October 11. This year’s festival features drive-in screenings in the Bronx, Brooklyn, and Queens and virtual screenings available nationwide. Get tickets and see more information: www.filmlinc.org/nyff2020
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  • Krátké a kreslené filmy

Komentáře • 52

  • @sultrylight7501
    @sultrylight7501 Před 3 lety +60

    Beautiful interview. What a rare, precious, deeply sensitive, compassionate soul Victor Kossakovsky is. If only there were more such people the world would be a better place.

    • @baiji123
      @baiji123 Před 3 lety +2

      So true!

    • @wendyambler5335
      @wendyambler5335 Před 2 lety

      I agree with sultry light.The world would definitely be a better place if we had more people like this.

  • @helensimpson2571
    @helensimpson2571 Před 3 lety +20

    I felt the exact same as a child, I loved animals. When I was three I had an argument with a fisherman by a lake. I wanted him to put the fish back into the water. I saw my Dad shoot rabbits on my Nanas farm and stopped speaking to him for a week.I have never understood why we are so cruel to them. His passion made me cry. I can’t wait to watch Gunda x

  • @neoepicurean3772
    @neoepicurean3772 Před 3 lety +14

    I spent the summer of a relatives farm when I was 9, and I became friend with a sheep named George. When I found out that George was killed for food I never ate lamb again, and hated eating all meat, but I thought I had to eat it. At 21 I learned that all the stuff about needing to eating meat and drink milk was all made up, so I stopped right away. That was over 20 years ago, and I have never once been tempted by meat since the day I gave up, even living in Norway where there were many, many times when I had to go without meals as there was no alternative. Now being vegan is so easy, there is no excuse apart from just refusing to see that you are paying for a sentient and emotionally sophisticated being to suffer and be killed just for your taste pleasure. I look forward to seeing Gunda.

    • @babykitti537
      @babykitti537 Před 3 lety +1

      You are a wonderful person.
      God bless you.
      🙏 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏

  • @shelleyhainer1633
    @shelleyhainer1633 Před 3 lety +18

    The film is masterful, beautiful and heart breaking. No words!

  • @azarikaKZ
    @azarikaKZ Před 3 lety +3

    I cried with him in the end 😭 I must admit I feel hopeless sometimes in life looking at as he phrased "what the fuck are we doing", but he gives me more hope! God bless him

  • @mellowboogie
    @mellowboogie Před 3 lety +10

    19:25, how I break down regularly thinking about the meat industry.

  • @jamesbooth9373
    @jamesbooth9373 Před 3 lety +8

    This is more than a movie. I have no idea to explain it. It's a perfect piece of cinema, but it's way more than that. Thank you Victor Kossakovsky for this film. But most of all, thank you to all the stars of the film, many (ar all) of whom are no longer with us. Let us also honour them and pay respect to their loss.

  • @vayasaberlo8
    @vayasaberlo8 Před 3 lety +4

    How absolutely wonderful and amazing that people like this exist; an example to human-unkind. . .

  • @brianwebberable
    @brianwebberable Před 3 lety +6

    What a wonderful person. This interview is so sensitive, it brought tears to my eyes.

  • @mellowboogie
    @mellowboogie Před 3 lety +7

    This man gives me hope. Hope I needed.

  • @rosiecoletta5031
    @rosiecoletta5031 Před 3 lety +7

    You can judge a nation by how it treats it animals

  • @Loke905
    @Loke905 Před 3 lety +8

    Can`t wait to watch it. Peace from Norway

  • @Catherine-2008
    @Catherine-2008 Před 3 lety +4

    What a beautiful compassionate soul!

  • @tikvahboy
    @tikvahboy Před 3 lety +4

    OK, I LOVE this man.

  • @TiffinboxTV
    @TiffinboxTV Před 3 lety +2

    This interview wins the day. Thank you Victor Kossakovsky and Rachel Rosen for this interview. I'll be watching this film and asking my friends to do the same.

  • @yuliak.4723
    @yuliak.4723 Před 3 lety +1

    What an amazing human being. Thank God these people exist! 🙏❤

  • @lizbethtovar4083
    @lizbethtovar4083 Před 2 lety

    Victor Kossakovsky you are such a wonderful person, you are so sensitive human that is impossible dont cry with your beatiful message. I feel exaclty the same as you and you give me hope. I die for watch this film.

  • @nealwailing3870
    @nealwailing3870 Před 3 lety +5

    This man is a genius!

  • @BhaarathRamesh
    @BhaarathRamesh Před 3 lety +3

    This man is real.

  • @narekkhachatryan8086
    @narekkhachatryan8086 Před 3 lety +1

    Victor, you're an awesome human being.

  • @sandeepshrestha6309
    @sandeepshrestha6309 Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you.

  • @neoepicurean3772
    @neoepicurean3772 Před 3 lety +2

    @8:51 that's a carnivore's 'yeah' if ever I heard one.

  • @nealwailing3870
    @nealwailing3870 Před 3 lety +9

    All non-vegans: PPPLLLLEEEEEAAAASSSSEEEEEE process this message--go straight, go vegan!!!!!!

  • @SantiHeve
    @SantiHeve Před 2 lety

    danke!!!

  • @FlavioDeFeo
    @FlavioDeFeo Před 3 lety +3

    A bit harsh 😂 but many of the things he says actually ring true. Thank you for this interview.

    • @nealwailing3870
      @nealwailing3870 Před 3 lety

      The truth around our appalling treatment of animals is harsh--but not as harsh as the holocaust we are subjecting them to....

  • @jakehammer557
    @jakehammer557 Před 3 lety

    Amen.

  • @solarnaut
    @solarnaut Před 3 lety

    " IT ' S C O M P L I C A T E D !!! " B-)
    Great to hear the director and it sounds like a great movie !
    In "My Octopus Teacher," they capture a scene of this solitary octopus "playing" with a school of fish . . . if fish had feelings, could that have been experienced as cruel or torturous ? Certainly other warring primates demonstrate that humans have no monopoly on cruelty or selfishness.
    Last I'd heard, which was a couple of years ago, they were growing a pretty fine "meat ball" in a petri dish, but hadn't prefectied the texture of a steak . . . yet.
    Presumably the world would be a better place with a little more empathy for the conscious well being of our fellow travelers (humans; mammals; birds; snakes?; spiders? . . . ) . . . and yet there will always be decisions that come down to the "economics"
    . . . having a mother sow choose to "sacrifice" (or was it a "mercy killing?) one of her piglets ("for the greater good?") sounds like one of those many "sophie's choices" that life dumps into our laps at times. In many cases, there may be no "right" answer . . . but often, perhaps "less worse" choices ?

  • @davidsummers4820
    @davidsummers4820 Před 3 lety

    About half way through, when sharing how many animals humans slaughter a year, he makes the point that if we allow ourselves to kill animals, we more easily permit ourselves to kill humans. He implies killing is wrong, always. However, earlier in the interview, he shares how Gunda had to kill one of her young, as she knew it would not survive. I would love to know how he explains this inconsistency.

    • @tobbs5410
      @tobbs5410 Před 3 lety +2

      Because most of the time, we don't base out morality around what other animals do. It's funny how we only ever do that when justifying killing animals for our palate pleasure.

  • @kristavaleriehiddema2471
    @kristavaleriehiddema2471 Před 3 lety +2

    The interviewer is awful. She had a script and just stuck to it. No creativity. No adaptation. HE WAS AMAZING.

    • @rosiegibson3692
      @rosiegibson3692 Před 3 lety +1

      I disagree. I think she was pitch perfect. She gave him emotional space. He was thankful for the questions

  • @sherman2828
    @sherman2828 Před 3 lety +1

    Beginning at 14:40, Kossakovsky brings up some important points, which are critical to thinking through the issues. First, the infallible authority of the Bible as God's Word, and hence the trustworthiness of its message about the meaning of things. Second, that those who have souls have a unique dignity of both body and soul which is not to be violated. Third, that if we believe in God we will acknowledge that we are under moral obligation, and that if we do not believe in God we will at the least be constrained by a consideration of self interest which we might extend to a concern for the rest of our own species.
    What could also be said to Kossakovsky that might be helpful as he thinks about these issues is, first, that the rational Creator has placed a rational design in the creation. Second, that the explanation as to why Kossakovsky creates and designs interesting films is because God has bestowed on him the dignity of someone made as the image and likeness of God. Third, that with this unique dignity, he has a moral obligation to show kindness in his care of the rest of the creation (e.g., Proverbs 12:10 and Exodus 20:10), an obligation which arises from the responsibility to reflect the just and merciful character of the Creator in whose image and likeness he is made, and thus an obligation surpassing calculations of self interest or the interests of his own species. The irony of Kossakovsky's reference to Christmas parties is that he glances past the solution to all the issues in which he is interested, because the incarnation of God would not have been possible if God had not already made human beings his own image and likeness.

  • @titicatfollies6615
    @titicatfollies6615 Před 3 lety

    I so wish I could understand his words. You might consider subtitles--his accent is so thick.

  • @megamoviez
    @megamoviez Před 3 lety +4

    Well that was bleak as hell. I think I have become vegetarian now.

    • @FlavioDeFeo
      @FlavioDeFeo Před 3 lety

      Mega MovieZ 😂

    • @titicatfollies6615
      @titicatfollies6615 Před 3 lety +2

      Bleak because it's contrary to what we do. But I'm afraid he's right.

    • @baiji123
      @baiji123 Před 3 lety

      Wonderful Mega! You got it!

    • @randyshields9800
      @randyshields9800 Před 3 lety +1

      Go vegan. The animals raised for milk and eggs are exploited longer and harder than the ones exploited for just their flesh and, ultimately, all of them experience the terror and brutality of the slaughterhouse.

  • @nealwailing3870
    @nealwailing3870 Před 3 lety

    A bit awkward for the interviewer/killer/torturer

  • @nealwailing3870
    @nealwailing3870 Před 3 lety

    Like me, this man has vystopia--she don't...

    • @solarnaut
      @solarnaut Před 3 lety +1

      Ok, you made me look B-)
      " Vystopia :
      " the anguish of being vegan in a non-vegan world. "

  • @danab172
    @danab172 Před 3 lety

    Pigs as friends are okay to kill. Dogs as friends are not okay to kill.

    • @tobbs5410
      @tobbs5410 Před 3 lety

      Why? I'd love to hear your dipshit justification for this.

    • @joeha7384
      @joeha7384 Před 2 lety

      The curious human hypocrisy