In the mud flats off the coast of Brittany, sea slugs dance as part of their courtship.
Co-directors Geneviève Hamon and Jean Painlevé filmed these creatures with their weird dances that remind me of very early movies like BUTTERFLY DANCE, to modernistic music by Pierre Jansen and André Girard. The film makers use about half the movie to show these surprisingly graceful dances, then get on with the business of reproduction. Acera is a hermaphroditic creature, which means it is simultaneously male and female, resulting in some very complicated grouping.
Although Painlevé had been making movies about sea life since the middle of the 1920s, often with a dark sense of humor, this one is far more of a feast of visual beauty: the grace of the slugs' dance, the motility of their eggs and juvenile form. To study well, you must be interested, and the weird beauty of these creatures' movement is captivating.
Co-directors Geneviève Hamon and Jean Painlevé filmed these creatures with their weird dances that remind me of very early movies like BUTTERFLY DANCE, to modernistic music by Pierre Jansen and André Girard. The film makers use about half the movie to show these surprisingly graceful dances, then get on with the business of reproduction. Acera is a hermaphroditic creature, which means it is simultaneously male and female, resulting in some very complicated grouping.
Although Painlevé had been making movies about sea life since the middle of the 1920s, often with a dark sense of humor, this one is far more of a feast of visual beauty: the grace of the slugs' dance, the motility of their eggs and juvenile form. To study well, you must be interested, and the weird beauty of these creatures' movement is captivating.