
Through a closed study of the notorious, now derelict district of Karantina, Sector Zero uses Karantina’s history as a metaphor for Lebanon’s own troubled past, suggesting that by denying their traumas, the Lebanese people have entered a downward spiral into the abyss that is their own collective unconscious. The film is not so much a documentation as it is an exploration into the dark corners of modern Lebanon’s collective memory in an attempt to discover how much of who we are is based largely on that part of ourselves we have chosen to forget.
Crew
Recommendations
view all
Directed by John Ford

Being James Bond

Sidney

McQueen

Ex Libris: The New York Public Library

Naqoyqatsi

Extremis

The Class of ‘92

A Plastic Ocean

Elstree 1976

Lovecraft: Fear of the Unknown

Listen to Me Marlon

Seduced and Abandoned

Tabloid

Fuck

The Curious Birth of Benjamin Button

The Summers of It - Chapter Two: It Ends

Heart of a Dog

Charlie: The Life and Art of Charles Chaplin

No Half Measures: Creating the Final Season of Breaking Bad