Modern Times Forever

2011
6.2| 240h0m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 23 March 2011 Released
Producted By:
Country:
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

The film shows centuries of decay, compressed into the span of the film, marking Helsinki's Stora Enso headquarters building.

Genre

Documentary

Watch Online

Modern Times Forever (2011) is currently not available on any services.

Cast

Director

Bjornstjerne Reuter Christiansen, Jakob Fenger, Rasmus Nielsen

Production Companies

Modern Times Forever Videos and Images
  • Top Credited Cast
  • |
  • Crew

Modern Times Forever Audience Reviews

SnoReptilePlenty Memorable, crazy movie
Chirphymium It's entirely possible that sending the audience out feeling lousy was intentional
Aedonerre I gave this film a 9 out of 10, because it was exactly what I expected it to be.
BeSummers Funny, strange, confrontational and subversive, this is one of the most interesting experiences you'll have at the cinema this year.
Zbigniew_Krycsiwiki The official plot description of this 240 hours long experimental installation read: "Apart from being present in our everyday lives, quietly changing for ten days, the film's time races ahead at an estimated several-hundred-year gallop each day. The film is a fiction about what could happen to the Stora Enso building as an architectural and ideological symbol, over the next few thousands of years, if the days of humankind come to an end, and only time and the weather affect the building." Modern Times Forever was shown only once, beginning at 20:00 local time, on Wednesday, 23 March 2011, and projected onto a 40 square metres screen in front of the block-like Stora Enso Building in Helsinki, Finland. It apparently showed the hypothetical ravages of thousands of years of decay of the building itself, the architectural structure itself. The makers, in a rambling promotional video, claim the film is "about time, architecture, and modernism", and this film is "a piece of architecture", and that it is " not the point to watch it from beginning to end", but to "experience the architecture of this public space"An experimental art film? An art installation? Or just stupid? By the way, this was produced by the same people responsible for the fairly self explanatory Burning Car, and Flooded McDonald's.