MMXXIII

MMF MMXXIII UPDATE: A CHAT WITH SØREN THILO FUNDER

Søren Thilo Funder, GAME Engine (Orange Bulletproof Kids), 2021, still

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The Milan Machinima Festival is delighted to present Søren Thilo Funder's groundbreaking work GAME Engine (Orange Bulletproof Kids) (2021) for the first time in Italy as a single channel video. Originally conceived as an installation. this work offers a thought-provoking and multi-layered exploration of the intersection between gaming and reality. GAME Engine takes the viewers on a journey to an undisclosed location, where they are invited to an exclusive press meeting with a game developer. Through the perspective of a spokesperson, the work offers a glimpse into a brand new game engine promising a revolutionary experience, with details shrouded in secrecy to protect its intellectual property value.

An artist who specializes in video and installation, Søren Thilo Funder, creates thought-provoking works that blend various cultural tropes, socio-political issues, and popular fictions. These narrative constructions operate within a delicate membrane where fictions and realities intersect, generating fresh interpretations and new meanings. Funder’s oeuvre is steeped in both written and unwritten histories, as well as a deep awareness of the paradoxes and complexities of societal engagement. His art explores temporal displacements, nonlinear storytelling, and the emergence of new, unconventional forms of memory. Through his work, Thilo Funder creates immersive spaces that enable unpredictable encounters with the political, temporal, and recollective. Funder received an MA from the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts and The School of Art and Architecture at the University of Illinois at Chicago. He is currently finishing a Doctorate program in Artistic Research at The Art Academy, Department of Contemporary Art, University of Bergen in Norway.

GAME Engine (Orange Bulletproof Kids) will be screened exclusively at the MIC - Museum of Interactive Cinema on March 25 2023 in the POLITICS OF GAMING program.

Thilo Funder's Everywhere (2007) was recently featured in VRAL S03.

Matteo Bittanti and Søren Thilo Funder discussed the genesis and evolution of GAME Engine, which has been exhibited internationally through various iterations.

Matteo Bittanti: Can you discuss how the recursive structure of GAME Engine (Orange Bulletproof Kids) reflects the repetitive nature of video game playing? Is this looped narrative a defining, quintessential feature of digital games? In our previous conversation, you spoke about the concept of tempor(e)ality, i.e., “the timeliness of reality, or how reality unfolds in accordance to time; not only on a phenomenological or conceptual level but on a socio-political one as well”, and how gaming can be a way for young people to “reclaim time”. However, the looped narrative in games can also give a false sense of progression: the effect is akin to being stuck in time, as seen in TV shows like Russian Doll and films like Groundhog Day. Can you address the tempor(e)ality of GAME Engine (Orange Bulletproof Kids)?

Søren Thilo Funder: I’ve been thinking a lot about how the recursive formatting of game levels somehow mirror the way in which we also seem to repeat gestures and passages in our everyday tempor(e)ality, to stay with that term. Especially in my work with CS:GO athletes, we kept circling around the idea of respawning, that is, the reappearance after having been killed, only to set out and repeat the motions that led to your perishing in the first place. GAME Engine (Orange Bulletproof Kids) was created specifically for an exhibition revolving around Extreme Sports. Here I proposed eSports as falling under this category. There is an extreme cognitive effort to the athlete that only succeeds if every micro action and choice is done at the exact right moment. And this extremely athletic precision is contrasted by the seated body and almost passive gaze of the athlete. I am really fascinated with the linkage to the excessive motion of the virtual character up on the screen and the physical still body that directs all the action. Another reason why I thought of CS:GO eSports as an extreme sport, is due to the complicated reality of having a sport where the playing field is induced with a political reality outside of the strategic unfolding of the game. I can think of no other sport where the competition is playing out in a field that is textured with the environment of an ongoing political conflict. I was interested in the linkage between what the players experienced cognitively, in the unfolding of their top athletic strategic maneuvering and astounding reaction time, and the visuality of the environment they navigated through, and the political landscape it represents. The respawning, of the CS:GO soldier, in the dark tunnel just outside the Mid Doors of the game level Dust 2, and of The Spokesperson delivering her presentation at the exclusive press meeting, perhaps speaks to the idea of being stuck in the recursive, but also that each respawning offers a possibility to think again, act different, learn from one’s environment. And technically (and conceptually), working with video installations for me is about progression in the looping environment. The video installation loops, the visitor of the installation can move about, leave, re-enter at their own behest. So linear narrative will always be an illusion – or for the apparatus itself to experience without a visitor – the real experience in the visitor will always be about assembling narrative, experiencing loops, selective editing or really respawning with the work. Or the work respawns every time a visitor leaves or enters. I like to use this circumstance quite deliberately, not as a way to bypass the problem of the visitor never experiencing what I had planned to be the experience, but rather to enforce this aspect and let this tempor(e)ality inform my process and my own experience of how narratives can be unfolded. There is a dreamlike sensation in experiencing the loop, that is not the loop. A return to somewhere else. I hope that this looping offers the possibility of reclaiming time – the time experience of the work but also really the time experience of existing in our contemporary tempor(e)ality. Progression is a strange word. It seems to have a certain implication of a productivity that leads towards accumulation, but I believe there could be progression in the looping, the respawning, the staying in the trouble and figuring out what the hell is going on before moving torrentially ahead.

Matteo Bittanti: Through repeated views of GAME Engine (Orange Bulletproof Kids), I couldn’t help but come to see a parallel to David Cronenberg’s eXistenZ. The spokesperson/game designer in both works is enigmatic yet captivating, charismatic yet elusive. Did you have Allegra Geller in mind while creating your project, and if so, to what extent was Cronenberg's 1999 reflection on video game culture a source of inspiration for your work?

Søren Thilo Funder: Allegra Geller is (tip of the cap) exactly the character I always imagined behind the game developer in GAME Engine (Orange Bulletproof Kids). We never meet her here though: we only see a…

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Matteo Bittanti

Works cited

Søren Thilo Funder

GAME Engine (Orange Bulletproof Kids)

digital video, color, sound, 30’ 02”, 2021, Denmark


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MMF MMXXIII UPDATE: A CHAT WITH ANDREA GATOPOULOS

Happy New Year, Jim, the official poster

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The Milan Machinima Festival is excited to present Andrea Gatopoulos' award-winning Happy New Year, Jim, a metaphysical meditation on virtual worlds and social connection in the age of video games. The machinima was (mostly) shot with/in Red Dead Redemption 2 (Rockstar Games, 2018). 

Happy New Year, Jim will be exclusively screened at the Museum of Interactive Cinema on Saturday March 25 2023 as part of the Made in Italy special program. Buy your ticket here.

Born in Pescara in 1994, Andrea Gatopoulos is the founder of the production company Il Varco, with which he has produced eleven short films and two feature films. Currently, he is the artistic director of Il Varco - International Short Film Festival, chosen by FilmFreeway for its Top 100 Best Festivals in the World, and is also the creator of the Short Days and Nuovo Cinema Abruzzese film festivals. His productions have been selected in over one hundred festivals around the world. Among his films are Flores del Precipicio (2022), Polepole (2021), Letters to Herzog (2020), Materia Celeste (2019), Spettri (2017) and Onyricon (2015).

Matteo Bittanti discussed the creative process behind Happy New Year, Jim with the filmmaker, Andrea Gatopoulos. 

Matteo Bittanti: Can you describe your path and trajectory as a filmmaker? What led you to explore cinema as a medium as an artform?

Andrea Gatopoulos: I consider myself a very curious, even nerdy person, and I began with cinema because I was exploring editing softwares back in the day when I was very young, around 12, 13. At that time, the first phones with cameras were being released on the market and I remember playing them with my friends, mocking blockbuster films. During my high school years, it became a sort of job since I would make videos for small companies in my hometown, for my friends’ birthdays and for my school. I think they still use a video of mine to advertise the school. I didn’t realize what cinema exactly was until I enrolled into university so I’ve never been one of those cinephiles that grew up watching author cinema. My origin story is completely profane, so to speak.

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Matteo Bittanti

Works cited

Andrea Gatopoulos

Happy New Year, Jim 

digital video/machinima, color, sound, 9’, 2022, Italy


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MMF MMXXIII UPDATE: A CHAT WITH STANISLAW PETRUK

Stanislaw Petruk

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The Milan Machinima Festival is excited to present Stanislaw Petruk's The Remnants, a short film created with the Unreal Engine set five years after a global disaster, where the remaining population is struggling to survive as the planet slowly dies. The machinima portrays the struggle for survival and the harsh reality of human nature in a post-apocalyptic world.

The Remnants will be exclusively screened at the Museum of Interactive Cinema on March 25 2023 as part of the Utopia/Dystopia program. Buy your ticket here.

Born in 1987, Stanisław Petruk is a filmmaker and Sr. VFX artist at Avalanche Studios in Sweden. He has directed several shorts and worked on video games such as WWE Immortals, Mortal Kombat, Agents of Mayhem, The Walking Dead, and Saints Row. He lives and works in Stockholm.

Matteo Bittanti discussed the creative and technical process behind The Remnants with the filmmaker, Stan Petruk.

Matteo Bittanti: Although you’re very young, you’ve already lived in several countries. How would you describe, comparatively, the social and cultural perception of video games in Russia, Poland, and Sweden, where you currently live and work?

Stanislaw Petruk: The great thing about the games is that they are very international. And here I am talking not only about players, but also about developers. And I think on the development side it is even more visible. You can easily move from one company to another even in a different country and work pipeline will be identical, same about the language – English for all communication and documentation.

Matteo Bittanti: You describe yourself as a self-taught artist, as you crafted your skills as a VFX artist and as a filmmaker mostly through online courses, tutorials, and hard work. Can you discuss your upbringing as somebody who “grew up on the internet”, so to speak?

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Matteo Bittanti

Works cited

Stanislaw Petruk

The Remnants

digital video, sound, 7’ 7”, 2022, Sweden


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