Last Things


Poster image Last Things

Evolution and extinction from the point of view of rocks and various future others. The geo-biosphere is introduced as a place of evolutionary possibility, where humans disappear but life endures.



Multi-devices

Product unavailable

Director

Deborah Stratman

Actor

L'équipe de Tënk

Share on

A six-pointed star that shimmers—it’s the future and the past flashing a sign. Spanning the beginning and the end of the world, Last Things offers an epic account of Earth’s life: from its mineral formation to vegetal and marine development, through the brief passage of a noxious bipedal species (guess who), to the rise of a superior mineral civilization. The link between hard science and speculative fiction unfolds in all its richness: the imaginary tales that punctuate the film, alongside ancient stories of Earth’s formation, suddenly seem entirely plausible—perhaps even desirable. Last Things is an odyssey where every stone is a world-being, every cave a futuristic metropolis, scientific diagrams become hieroglyphs, and the whole thing passes through us, making us feel both eternal and insignificant. Though it leaves no doubt about the coming end of the human species, Deborah Stratman’s film offers a surprising sense of comfort, where beauty envelops as much as it chills. Last Things leaves us with a joyful promise: hope will outlive us.



Baume Moinet-Marillaud
Chargé de diffusion audiovisuelle à Tënk


  • Français

    Français

    50 mn

    Language: Français
    Subtitles: Français
  • English

    English

    50 mn

    Language: English
    Subtitles: English
  • Année 2023
  • Pays United States, France, Portugal
  • Durée 50
  • Producteur Pythagoras Film, Elinka Films, Stenar Projects
  • Langue English, French
  • Sous-titres French, English
  • Résumé court Science, fiction, science-fiction : evolution and extinction told from the perspective of the mineral world.
  • Compositeur
  • Mention festival
  • Feministe equitable
  • Image revue
  • Description revue
  • Lien revue
  • Avertissement
  • Texte bouton revue

A six-pointed star that shimmers—it’s the future and the past flashing a sign. Spanning the beginning and the end of the world, Last Things offers an epic account of Earth’s life: from its mineral formation to vegetal and marine development, through the brief passage of a noxious bipedal species (guess who), to the rise of a superior mineral civilization. The link between hard science and speculative fiction unfolds in all its richness: the imaginary tales that punctuate the film, alongside ancient stories of Earth’s formation, suddenly seem entirely plausible—perhaps even desirable. Last Things is an odyssey where every stone is a world-being, every cave a futuristic metropolis, scientific diagrams become hieroglyphs, and the whole thing passes through us, making us feel both eternal and insignificant. Though it leaves no doubt about the coming end of the human species, Deborah Stratman’s film offers a surprising sense of comfort, where beauty envelops as much as it chills. Last Things leaves us with a joyful promise: hope will outlive us.



Baume Moinet-Marillaud
Chargé de diffusion audiovisuelle à Tënk


  • Français

    Français


    Duration: 50 minutes
    Language: Français
    Subtitles: Français
    50 mn
  • English

    English


    Duration: 50 minutes
    Language: English
    Subtitles: English
    50 mn
  • Année 2023
  • Pays United States, France, Portugal
  • Durée 50
  • Producteur Pythagoras Film, Elinka Films, Stenar Projects
  • Langue English, French
  • Sous-titres French, English
  • Résumé court Science, fiction, science-fiction : evolution and extinction told from the perspective of the mineral world.
  • Compositeur
  • Mention festival
  • Feministe equitable
  • Image revue
  • Description revue
  • Lien revue
  • Avertissement
  • Texte bouton revue

Product added to cart

Mode:

Expires:

loader waiting image
loader waiting image