Almost fifteen years after I Don’t Know What Your Eyes Have Done to Me, one of its directors reunites with the lost footage of their first encounter with Ada Falcón. A “silent scenes” triggers his search in order to decipher the enigma of the absent voice, in an emotional journey where film becomes a path to retrace time.
Sergio Wolf returns to the unattainable territory of his first film (I Don’t Know What Your Eves Have Done To Me) with a delicacy and grace that are both stimulating and unusual. I Will Live With Your Memories revolves around an obsession: a soundless scene discarded from that film becomes the engine for this new incursion by the director into the secret life of Ada Falcón, the early secluded and isolated singer, forgotten by everyone but a handful of compulsive aesthetes. Ada is no longer among the living, and those silenced words have become an enigma. The film is a poetic investigation on the possibilities of cinema when retrieving truth to the things we see on the screen, and reminds viewers of the power of persuasion of the image, that sensible magma where the dead dance and find their voices back. DO
D, G, P: Sergio Wolf F: Fernando Lockett E: Hernán Rosselli S: Emilio Iglesias M: Gabriel Chwojnik PE: Gabriel Kameniecki I: Ada Falcón, Miguel Zavala, Edgardo Cozarinsky, Fernando Vega, Sabrina Grinschpun
Sergio Wolf T +54 9 11 5180 1553 E sergiodwolf@gmail.com ~ gabriel.kameniecki@gmail.com
Born in Buenos Aires in 1963, he studied communication at the UBA. He co-directed I Don’t Know What Your Eyes Have Done to Me (Bafici ‘03) with Lorena Muñoz, the documentary trilogy Ritos de frontera (2002) with Alejo Taube and, by himself, The Color Out of Space. He was a programmer at Bafici between 2005 and 2007, and its arti...