Sleep Furiously offers a meditative study of the rhythms of life in a small hill-farming community in Trefeurig, mid-Wales, a place where director Gideon Koppel's parents, both refugees, found a home.
Of the film Gideon has said 'In a farming community, seasonal change and cyclical movements are very much part of life, in quite a visceral and practical way – much more so than measurements of time. So while filming, ritual, rhythm and cyclical movements were important to me and it was then a question of finding ways to translate those sensitivities to pictures and sounds.'
Koppel's film also depicts a way of life that is changing, as small-scale agriculture which characterised the area is disappearing and the last generation who inhabited a pre-mechanised world is dying out. The local school is about to close, bus services have been withdrawn, congregations are dwindling. Wider patterns of change point to uncertain futures for remote communities such as Trefeurig, but at no point does the film lose sight of the quiet power of individual encounters and routines, as we follow John Jones for instance, patiently driving his mobile library through the village lanes.
Available from Friday 31 July 6:30pm (BST) - Sunday 2 August 6:30pm (BST)
Please join us for a live Q&A with Gideon, hosted by filmmaker Margaret Salmon, on Friday 31 July at 8:30pm.
After you have watched the film, we would appreciate if you could answer a few short questions about your viewing experience via this survey
Trouble booking? Be in touch to let us know and we will do what we can to help!
- Year2008
- Runtime94 minutes
- LanguageEnglish
- CountryUnited Kingdom
- DirectorGideon Koppel
- ProducerGideon Koppel & Margaret Matheson
- Executive ProducerMike Figgis & Serge Lalou
- CinematographerGideon Koppel
- EditorMario Battistel
- MusicAphex Twin
Sleep Furiously offers a meditative study of the rhythms of life in a small hill-farming community in Trefeurig, mid-Wales, a place where director Gideon Koppel's parents, both refugees, found a home.
Of the film Gideon has said 'In a farming community, seasonal change and cyclical movements are very much part of life, in quite a visceral and practical way – much more so than measurements of time. So while filming, ritual, rhythm and cyclical movements were important to me and it was then a question of finding ways to translate those sensitivities to pictures and sounds.'
Koppel's film also depicts a way of life that is changing, as small-scale agriculture which characterised the area is disappearing and the last generation who inhabited a pre-mechanised world is dying out. The local school is about to close, bus services have been withdrawn, congregations are dwindling. Wider patterns of change point to uncertain futures for remote communities such as Trefeurig, but at no point does the film lose sight of the quiet power of individual encounters and routines, as we follow John Jones for instance, patiently driving his mobile library through the village lanes.
Available from Friday 31 July 6:30pm (BST) - Sunday 2 August 6:30pm (BST)
Please join us for a live Q&A with Gideon, hosted by filmmaker Margaret Salmon, on Friday 31 July at 8:30pm.
After you have watched the film, we would appreciate if you could answer a few short questions about your viewing experience via this survey
Trouble booking? Be in touch to let us know and we will do what we can to help!
- Year2008
- Runtime94 minutes
- LanguageEnglish
- CountryUnited Kingdom
- DirectorGideon Koppel
- ProducerGideon Koppel & Margaret Matheson
- Executive ProducerMike Figgis & Serge Lalou
- CinematographerGideon Koppel
- EditorMario Battistel
- MusicAphex Twin