2648 – A Zed & Two Noughts (1985)

Peter Greenaway’s film A Zed & Two Noughts (1985)—often simply called Zoo by viewers due to its setting—is primarily set in and around a zoo in an unnamed English city (filmed at the Rotterdam Zoo in the Netherlands). The setting is not just literal but thematically central.

Main settings and symbolism:

  • The Zoo: Acts as a surreal, enclosed ecosystem where decay, evolution, and symmetry are observed. It’s where the twin protagonists, both zoologists, become obsessed with time-lapse decomposition and the cycle of life and death.
  • Hospital: The story begins when the wives of the twin brothers die in a car crash caused by a swan. The hospital where they grieve also becomes a setting of sterile introspection.
  • Vermeer-like interiors: Several scenes are framed to mirror Dutch paintings, especially Vermeer, adding to the film’s obsession with visual symmetry, order, and decay.
  • Time-lapse studio: The twins film the decomposition of animals and even fruit and vegetables, turning scientific observation into a kind of art installation.

Greenaway’s “zoo” is less about animals and more about the architecture of death, symmetry, and nature as a system of entropy. The physical zoo becomes a metaphorical stage for philosophical inquiries.

imdb   //  wiki

2606 – Nosferatu (2024)

timespace coordinates: 1838, Wisburg, Germany / Transylvania‘s Carpathian Alps

Nosferatu is a 2024 American gothic horror film written and directed by Robert Eggers (The VVitch). It is a remake of F. W. Murnau‘s 1922 film Nosferatu: A Symphony of Horror (online here), itself based on Bram Stoker‘s 1897 novel Dracula.

The film stars Bill Skarsgård as Count Orlok, while Nicholas Hoult and Lily-Rose Depp star as Thomas and Ellen Hutter. The supporting cast includes Aaron Taylor-JohnsonEmma CorrinRalph InesonSimon McBurney, and Willem Dafoe. (wiki)

imdb

2528

Rotten Meat & Fly Larvae: What You Aren’t Told About Traditional Diets

– Fermenting seals, botulism, ancestral foods and the use of decaying meat in prehistory –