Presenting the Quantum Shorts film festival finalists
Presenting the Quantum Shorts film festival finalists
“Weirdly compelling,” was one judge’s comment. “A very adventurous concept,” said another. “Creative and funny,” came a third verdict.
Otago Museum, a Quantum Shorts film festival screening partner, and the Dodd-Walls Centre for Photonic and Quantum Technologies, a festival scientific partner, are pleased to announce the ten finalists from this year’s competition and to invite public votes for the People’s Choice award.
The shortlist spans a range of styles and genres, from fascinating sci-fi visions to absurdist takes on the multiverse. There are quantum detectives, love stories, and science-inspired comedy.
The 176 submissions came from all over the world, with the finalists from Australia, Brazil, Canada, India, Singapore, Spain, the United Kingdom and the United States.
David Hutchinson, Director, Dodd-Walls Centre and a festival judge says, “We offer our congratulations to all the shortlisted filmmakers, who have already bagged a $250 prize and a one-year digital subscription to Scientific American – plus the opportunity for audiences across the globe to see their films in dedicated screenings. And now, we wish them luck as the judging panel picks the winners.”
Otago Museum and the Dodd-Walls Centre will host the first New Zealand public screening of the films, each no longer than five minutes, on Friday 8 March from 5.30pm in the Museum’s Beautiful Science gallery. The public is invited to join a team of quantum physicists from the Dodd-Walls Centre to discuss and debate, over refreshments, the films’ quantum concepts — be they from the realm of science fiction, science fact, or somewhere in between.
For those not able to make it to the launch, the Museum will host public screenings in its Barclay Theatre at 12 noon and 2pm on Saturday 9 March and Sunday 10 March, and the films can also be viewed online at https://shorts.quantumlah.org/films.
The 10 finalists are as follows:
10-57
In this short by
Daniel Baig, a police officer responds to an emergency call,
only to find himself caught in a quantum
dilemma.
Atoms Searching for
Immateriality
Anne-Marie Bouchard’s film
shines a spotlight on photoluminescent nanoparticles,
displaying their starlike nature.
Gluon
Free
Chris Willoughby directed, wrote and
produced this absurdist exploration of the
multiverse.
Heads or Tails
A
noir-ish take on a Schrödinger’s cat situation, by
director Lin Tianyun and screenwriter Chen Peishan.
If the World Spinned
Backwards
Writers Leonardo Martinelli and
Arthur Valverde imagine how quantum theory’s independence
of time would change the human
experience.
Knock
Grace Lambert
and Noemi Gunea share the writing, producing, acting and
directing credits on this comedic take on the threat of
black holes.
LEGIO VIII QUANTAE. "The quantum
resurgence after the fall of Silicon
Valley"
A sci-fi vision of quantum
technology’s legacy, directed by Andrea Rodriguez
Blanco.
QED
A Nobel
prize-winning theory inspired Chetan V Kotabage’s film
about a lost
opportunity.
Slide!
A
detective, a serial killer and a parallel universe provide
the framework for Tay Li Guo’s quantum
thriller.
Under My Bed
Paco
Freire wrote and directed this pithy horror-style take on
quantum superposition.
About Quantum
Shorts
Quantum Shorts has alternated between
annual calls for science fiction and science films since
2012. The festival is organised by the Centre for Quantum
Technologies at the National University of Singapore, with
media partners Nature and Scientific American
and an international network of scientific partners and
screening
partners.