LAKE BAIGAL

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Lake Baikal has been a sacred place for Mongols, Buryats and Sakha—even Russians, who colonized the area not so long ago, call it “Holy Baikal”. Telengut, a Canadian filmmaker of Mongolian origin, uses the Buryat language and exquisite animation to bring to life the lake’s geological history, its geography, the surrounding nature, the mythological background – and we understand the beauty and symbolical importance of the planet’s deepest lake to the Siberian cultures that connect their very existence to Baikal.
BAIKALSEE
CAN, DEU 2023 / 9 min
Director: Alisi Telengut
Screenings
  • Murnau Th, 25.04. / 16:00 Uhr
  • Caligari Fr, 26.04. / 20:30 Uhr
  • Sound: Christian Obermaier, Jochen Jezussek
  • Cast: Marina Dorzhieva
  • Producer: Alisi Telengut, Fabian Driehorst
  • Production Company: Fabian&Fred (info@fabianfred.com)
Lake Baikal has been a sacred place for Mongols, Buryats and Sakha—even Russians, who colonized the area not so long ago, call it “Holy Baikal”. Telengut, a Canadian filmmaker of Mongolian origin, uses the Buryat language and exquisite animation to bring to life the lake’s geological history, its geography, the surrounding nature, the mythological background – and we understand the beauty and symbolical importance of the planet’s deepest lake to the Siberian cultures that connect their very existence to Baikal.
  • Sound: Christian Obermaier, Jochen Jezussek
  • Cast: Marina Dorzhieva
  • Producer: Alisi Telengut, Fabian Driehorst
  • Production Company: Fabian&Fred (info@fabianfred.com)