Zurich


Wende Snijders
Zurich by Sacha Polak
NLD/BEL/DEU 2015, Forum
© Frank van den Eeden

Wende Snijders, Sascha Alexander Gersak
Zurich by Sacha Polak
NLD/BEL/DEU 2015, Forum
© Frank van den Eeden

Wende Snijders, Sacha Alexander Gersak
Zurich by Sacha Polak
NLD/BEL/DEU 2015, Forum
© Frank van den Eeden

Sacha Polak
Zurich by Sacha Polak
NLD/BEL/DEU 2015, Forum
© Bas Losekoot
The young woman goes to ground in the anonymous world of motorways and service stations, restless and constantly on the move to avoid ever having to look back. The director follows her movements from as close as possible, a state of closeness that gives the film its texture. Nina and the camera end up in a state of delirium, drifting and drifting away. Nina once again finds herself in a long-distance lorry driver’s bed, spends a couple of days with him, he even introduces her to his children, before she ends up back on the road. The montage jumps between different times and makes memories flare up – of easygoing moments, of another man. The scenes are only loosely connected and do not add up to the story of a life. Sometimes the camera lingers on Nina’s face, registering the different facets of an all-encompassing grief – running the gamut from absolute hopelessness, anger, to sheer despair. Sacha Polak’s film lets the viewer almost take part in the grieving process.