Advanced search
- TITLES
- NAMES
- COLLABORATIONS
Search filters
Enter full date
to
or just enter yyyy, or yyyy-mm below
to
to
to
Exclude
Only includes titles with the selected topics
to
In minutes
to
1-5 of 5
- 12 August 1945, 11 AM. Two mysterious strangers dressed in black appear at the railway station of a Hungarian village. Within a few hours, everything changes.
- True story of a serial killer in 1950-60s Hungary.
- Dani is preparing for his upcoming wedding when he meets his childhood friend, Timi who is a famous model now. After a few drinks, they sleep together on their high school reunion without knowing that they are being filmed.
- Drop dead please! Following the sudden death of a mysterious engine driver in his sixties, the Wife, the Lover, her illegitimate Daughter and an increasing number of shady characters from his spurious past want to know the true identity of the man they loved. They are dying to know which of them was really loved by him, and where he has hidden the fantastic fruit of his double life. In their deadly struggle, our heroes find themselves in the center of a satirical crime comedy, the sinful roots of which stretch back to the eighties, the closing decade of the socialist era.
- Preservation in Progress: Video and digital contents are part of our everyday lives, and they keep our fast-moving world in motion. It's not surprising that more and more contemporary artists tend to turn towards media art. The process of technological change and technologies becoming outdated are nowadays considered to be natural, thus, contrary to the restoration of the traditional (conservative) pieces of art, the media artworks age faster, and these media have become part of the cultural heritage too. Museums are bound to find a long-term solution to this problem. The Ludwig Museum's documentary aims at uncovering the creation of media artworks and ways of possible preservation through interviews made with artists of this genre. Time is a fundamental element of these works of art, so the ultimate question is: What do we call artwork today, and what should be preserved for the future generations?