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PRODUCTION / FINANCEMENT Royaume-Uni / France / Canada

Mare’s Nest, de Ben Rivers, fera sa première mondiale en compétition à Locarno

par 

- Le nouveau film du cinéaste britannique, vendu par Rediance, suit une petite fille qui erre dans un monde mystérieux dépourvu d'adultes

Mare’s Nest, de Ben Rivers, fera sa première mondiale en compétition à Locarno
Mare's Nest de Ben Rivers (© Ben Rivers)

Cet article est disponible en anglais.

UK experimental filmmaker and visual artist Ben Rivers returns to the Locarno Film Festival (6-16 August) with Mare’s Nest, his latest hybrid fiction feature set to world-premiere in the gathering’s International Competition (see the news). The film was produced by Andrea Queralt, hot off her Cannes success with Óliver Laxe’s Sirât [+lire aussi :
critique
bande-annonce
interview : Óliver Laxe
fiche film
]
, which picked up the Jury Prize in the main competition in May.

Yesterday, Variety first reported that Rediance has boarded world sales on the title, marking its third collaboration with Rivers after Bogancloch [+lire aussi :
critique
interview : Ben Rivers
fiche film
]
– recently picked up for North American distribution by Cinema Guild – and Krabi, 2562 [+lire aussi :
critique
bande-annonce
interview : Ben Rivers
fiche film
]
, which screened at Locarno in 2024 and was included in the festival’s “Moving Ahead” section in 2019.

Blending fiction, documentary, poetic essay and fable, Mare’s Nest follows Moon (newcomer Moon Guo Barker), a young girl who wanders through a mysterious, adult-free world. During her journey, she encounters a sage and a translator in a mountain hut, and a series of characters that offer different models of living. As she observes, learns and moves forward, the film opens up a vision of an uncertain yet hope-filled future.

According to Rivers, the story was born of “an accumulative feeling of dread” for the world being left to future generations. The initial spark came from the effects of COVID-19 on children, combined with the influence of Don DeLillo’s climate change-themed play The Word for Snow. He crafted the part of Moon specifically for Barker, shaping the story into a kind of near-future road movie tinged with unease, but also wonder.

In line with Rivers’ taste for layered realities, the movie includes a film-within-a-film: his 2022 short The Minotaur, presented here as a creation by the children within the narrative.

Shot over three years in Menorca and the UK, Mare’s Nest was produced by Rivers for Urth Films (UK) together with Queralt’s outfit, 4A4 Productions (France), in co-production with Fabrizio Polpeti for La Bête (France), Aonan Yang for GreenGround (Canada) and ARTE France’s La Lucarne arm.

(Traduit de l'anglais)

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