Watch Companion
Spoiler-safe reference guide to pull up while you watch.
Following Bellavista and Totó, Peter Schreiner completes his informal trilogy of epic, black-and-white digital-video essay-films with the utterly monumental Fata Morgana. Shot in the Libyan desert and in an abandoned building in Lausitz, Germany, it features a man (Christian Schmidt), a woman (Giuliana Pachner, from Bellavista) - and, glimpsed now and again, a guide (Awad Elkish.) They talk, they fall silent. Winds blow. The sun shines. The camera runs. What gradually takes shape is nothing less than a painstakingly concentrated attempt to understand the human condition through the lens of cinema. A lofty ambition, and one that demands a considerable leap of faith on the part of the audience: this film is sedate, "difficult", challenging, often apparently impenetrable. But anyone who has seen Schreiner's previous films will be aware that he is by any standards a major artist, one that can be trusted to find places that other directors may not even suspect exist.

Seduced and Abandoned
2013

Public Speaking
2011

Directed by John Ford
1971

McQueen
2018

Naqoyqatsi
2002

As I Was Moving Ahead, Occasionally I Saw Brief Glimpses of Beauty
2000

Being James Bond
2021

Birth of the Living Dead
2013

Heart of a Dog
2015

American Boy: A Profile of Steven Prince
1978