“Almost everything you see in the movie is taken from documentary research that we’ve done in the camp, and on volunteer work, for many months, in a camp.”
“This is all born from the state people are in, in the camp, which is very specific, which is hard to explain unless you are there. Because it’s a place that is nor here, nor there, which means your state of mind is stateless, and that creates a shift, constantly, based on moods, on what happens in the moment, and everything is amplified. Any rumours of conspiracy is amplified, anything that might go wrong or might go right, and the highs are high, and the lows are low. And the danger is extreme, because it is such an intense pressure cooker, being inside this situation.”
“A friend of mine said it was a movie about borders: the ones we create in our minds, and the ones that are imposed on us.”
“They carry a very intense trauma, just from the road to Greece, and often, they have lost somebody or left somebody behind. They don’t necessarily talk about this when they arrive, because they’re trying to prepare their minds for a new place, a new world, but I think that a lot of trauma is suppressed, and it starts to come out in different ways. And it’s something people don’t realise… You meet people later, in Europe, and you don’t realise, you don’t know what they’ve had to do to get to this place, if that place offers them any love back. What they’ve had to go through… It’s heartbreaking to see what’s happening in Europe right now.”
The post “Xoftex”, an interview with director Noaz Deshe appeared first on Fred Film Radio.