The research behind Half Elf presented at the European Association of Social Anthropologists Conference

21.07.2020

Jón Bjarki Magnússon, director and producer of Half Elf, will present his paper, Visualizing my grandparents: Filmmaking as a way to make visible the experience of elderly people, at the 16th EASA (European Association of Social Anthropologists) Biennal Conference tomorrow, Wednesday.

In his presentation, Jón Bjarki looks at how documentary filmmaking becomes research practice when the lens is focused on the everyday life of an elderly couple. Further, he explores how an ethical approach to filmmaking for fieldwork and the use of editing as an analytical tool are affected when working with those familiar to us. His case study is Half Elf(2020), a feature length documentary film made during his Masters in Visual Anthropology program at Freie Universität in Berlin. The film is about his grandparents, Hulda and Trausti, both recently deceased but previously and when he was making this film, sharing life on Icelandic shores for over seventy years.

As his one hundredth birthday nears Trausti begins searching for a coffin and tells his wife that he wants to change his name to “Elf”. Hulda warns him that if he does this his family will abandon him and she retreats into a world of poetry with the help of an electric magnifying glass. The process of filming this story, editing a narrative and raising funds to bring the film to a wide audience were all fraught with familial difficulties. Jón Bjarki needed to navigate these obstacles and use the problems they presented to support the filmmaking and deepen the research.

The presentation will be a part of the Illuminating Futures of the Life Course through Visual and Digital Media panel of the Age and Generations Network, which explores an emerging trend in the Anthropology of the Life Course to use visual and digital methods to generate and disseminate anthropological knowledge. Presentations examine how visual/digital engagement changes the experience of ageing, and the act and product of ethnographic fieldwork.

The 16th EASA Biennal Conference was set to be held in Lisbon, Portugal, during the week of July 20th-24th but was moved online due to Covid 19. More information about the panel here.

Feelsales takes on the worldwide distribution of Half Elf

20.07.2020

We are glad to announce that SKAK bíófilm has made an agreement with international distributor Feelsales in Madrid, Spain, about the worldwide distribution of Half Elf.

Feelsales is an international sales agency dedicated to documentary films and short films. Feelsales is part os a unique group of companies known as The circular Group, that includes Freak Independent Film Agency, an agency specialized in international film festivals distribution, and Feelmakers.com, a VOD platform dedicated to documentaries, animation and short films.

The three companies together offer a complete service of film management that spans across all stages of distribution: from film festival and international sales to VOD worldwide, and offer a unique strategy that achieves the best results for each film.

Half Elf premieres at Skjaldborg – Icelandic documentary film festival

9.07.2020

It is now official! Half Elf will be premiered at Skjaldborg – the Icelandic documentary film festival in Patreksfjörður during the first weekend of August (July 31st – August 2nd).

The festival normally takes place during the Whitsun weekend (a holiday weekend in Iceland celebrated fifty days after Easter Sunday with dates varying from May to June each year), but was postponed this year due to covid.

Founded in 2007, the festival is the only specialised platform for the premiere of Icelandic documentaries and the home of the Icelandic documentary scene.

The Icelandic documentaries premiering at the festival compete for the the coveted audience award Einarinn and Ljoskastarinn, the grand jury award. Half Elf is one of fourteen films selected for this years festival. More information about the festival here.