One Man Dies a Million Times [In-Person Only]

This event took place Dec 7 - Dec 14, 2022

$13 General Admission
$10 Student/Child/Senior
$7 Member

⚠️ Public safety notice ⚠️

NWFF patrons will be required to wear masks that cover both nose and mouth while in the building. Disposable masks are available at the door for those who need them. We are not currently checking vaccination cards. Recent variants of COVID-19 readily infect and spread between individuals regardless of vaccination status.

NWFF is adapting to evolving recommendations to protect the public from COVID-19. Read more about their policies regarding cleaning, masks, and capacity limitations here.

Jessica Oreck
Russia & US
2022
1h 32m

About

(Jessica Oreck, Russia & US, 2022, 92 min, in Russian with English subtitles)

** This film will never be streamed online; it can only be seen in cinemas. **

Alyssa and Maksim both work at the Institute of Plant Genetic Resources in the center of the city. The Institute houses the world’s first seed bank—an irreplaceable trove of living genetic diversity which holds the potential to transform modern agriculture.

The two young botanists fall in love as the world wages war around them. A record-breaking, desperate winter sets in and the city slowly, painfully, begins to starve to death. Savagery transplants civility. Maksim and Alyssa defend the seed bank and its priceless collection of edible specimens from the starving masses of the city, the enemy, hordes of rats, and each other.

Part documentary, part legend, One Man Dies a Million Times is the true story of the seed bank and the botanists who worked there throughout the Siege of Leningrad (1941–1944). Though the characters portrayed in this film actually lived, and the events they experienced actually happened, this is not a reenactment. Director Jessica Oreck (Beetle Queen Conquers Tokyo) and cinematographer Sean Price Williams (Good Time) artfully transplant their narrative from 1940s Leningrad to a science fiction-inflected modern day.

Jessica Oreck brings furious historical research and anguished empathy to the scientists’ struggle to survive and to protect the inestimable treasures that would nourish future lives…” – Richard Brody, The New Yorker

A haunting meditation on the nature of humanity and how to survive our own downfall.” – Christopher Reed, Hammer to Nail


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Northwest Film Forum
1515 12th Ave,

Seattle, WA 98122

206 329 2629


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