An Impossible Project
Germany
381 people rated Humans are analogue! We're literally sick of the digital world engulfing us. People are yearning for real things and authenticty. IMPOSSIBLE is sensuous and inspiring film about the revenge of analog. And the eccentric, crazy Austrian scientist, who saved the world's last Polaroid factory - just when Steve Jobs introduced the first iPhone. An entertaining underdog story of a very modern Don Quixote, shot on 35mm. And a sumptuous invitation to fall in love with real things again. (Like sending you a beautifully typed application form on nice paper, rather than this cold tech template)
Documentary
Cast (11)
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User Reviews
MuQtar Mustafa
29/05/2023 21:02
source: An Impossible Project
Ranz Kyle
22/11/2022 17:10
I knew that some outfit named Impossible had resurrected Polaroid's SX-70 film production, but had no idea what the story was. Very well done, though it would have benefited from a little actual background on the history of Land and Polaroid, mainly for those young enough to have not been around in the mid-late 20th century.
I was deeply dismayed, though, at facebook's sudden intrusion into the narrative, and at Doc's naivete regarding the damage it's done to the world with its grotesque, self-absorbed amorality. He did his research, and is a smart enough guy to understand its meaning, but still cozied up to them. I could scarcely sit through his initial wooden, stilted meeting in their quaint little print shop, and the extent of the facebook employees' delusion shows in their considering this silkscreening curio to be the "heart and soul" of a truly evil company. That kind of money distorts everything and rarely does anyone any good, regardless of whether they humour a harmless screwball from time to time by picking up the tab for a party. I sincerely hope he's since broken with them.
AneelVala
22/11/2022 17:10
Thank you for bringing us this beautiful movie- this feeling is universal and digitalization though useful -does not provide the " the real feeling" The movie has done well in connecting this common feeling. The rebirth of Polaroid has been explained so well. A dream and a vision by one single person can change the world. A must watch for getting motivation to follow your dreams.
Hope Ashley Grusshab
22/11/2022 17:10
An Impossible Project invites us to reconnect with our senses in this increasingly senseless world through the reclamation of analogue media and technology. It does not make the easy claim that "analogue is better than digital" or vice versa, but rather asks how we may find a balance between digital and non-digital in our rapidly digitising world. It presents us with an opportunity to switch off, step back, and reassess our relationship to digital technology in order to keep ourselves grounded in the physical realm. Especially in the midst of the Covid-era, stuck on Zoom or scrolling social media for hours a day, the film reminds us of the value of tactility, tangibility and the human connection that comes from analogue.
||ᴍs||
22/11/2022 17:10
While it is beautifully shot, and Doc is a wonderfully crazy character, everything in the film felt, well, underexposed. Even Doc. I'm not sure we ever understood anyone's real motives. The film felt very much all over the place, without ever really going anywhere. It's missing the details we need to get to the heart of who these people are, and why they do what they do. And had I not read the Bonanos book on Polaroid, I would have been completely confused as to what was going on with the main story in this film. Also...the most interesting character in this story, the one who truly gave it birth, Edwin Land, is completely glossed over. It just felt like a missed opportunity. (Saw this at DOC NYC 2020 film festival.)
merryriana
22/11/2022 17:10
An impossible feat in and of itself; an indie film shooting all 35mm. A well told story, beautifully shot. A must see.
KING CARLOS OFFICIAL
22/11/2022 17:10
Trailer—An Impossible Project
Mia Botha
22/11/2022 04:12
An Impossible Project