OMEGA WANTS TO DANCE

OMEGA WANTS TO DANCE

NORTH AMERICAN PREMIERE In an imagined future where humans no longer exist, an AI system reflects on dance as the essence of consciousness, spontaneity, and identity. Philosophers, historians, artists, and Nobel laureates trace dance across ritual, flamenco, butoh, rave culture, and historical dance epidemics. Eclectic archives, experimental interludes, and candid testimonies weave a vibrant essay on movement as joy, ritual, and survival. At once speculative sci-fi and grounded documentary, the film creates a dazzling meditation on humanity’s eternal urge to dance. – Ruth Somalo

The first screening will be followed by a Q&A with director Ramon Tort.

All in-person screening venues provide sound amplification headphones upon request with venue management. IFC Center can also provide a T-Coil loop for compatible devices.

Director: Ramon Tort
Producer: Ramon Tort
Executive Producer: Sara Pardo
Cinematographer: Ramon Tort
Editor: Daniel Arasanz, Ramon Tort
Language: Spanish, Turkish, Brazilian Portuguese, Japanese, French, Italian
Year: 2025

Event details


In-Person Date

Thursday, November 13, 2025 7:00 PM

Venue

Village East by Angelika


Online Dates

Friday, November 14 - Sunday, November 30, 2025

Venue

Online Screening

Explore More

NYC PREMIERE Many of those who called Boca Chica home don’t anymore. When Elon Musk’s SpaceX decided to build its 50-story rocket in the Texas town, it forced people away. Birds have been stopped in flight, and people who remained can no longer access the beaches they grew up visiting. Julien Elie’s dystopic sci-fi documentary is a warning for what happens when greed and ego seem to have no visible boundaries. - Bedatri D. Choudhury

The first screening will be followed by a Q&A with director Julien Elie.

All in-person screening venues provide sound amplification headphones upon request with venue management. IFC Center can also provide a T-Coil loop for compatible devices.

NORTH AMERICAN PREMIERE Beautifully composed and subtly unsettling, Unanimal interrogates the entangled, often contradictory relationship between humans and animals. Narrated with calm detachment by Isabella Rossellini, the essay film offers a critical yet poetic historical lens on the evolution of our cohabitation with nonhuman life. It creates space for viewers to question the ways we project meaning onto animals, and how our frameworks of science, entertainment, and affection shape their lives—and ours. - Ruth Somalo

The first screening will be followed by a Q&A with directors Tuva Bjork, Sally Jacobson, and producers Victor Ede, Melissa Lindgren and Tobias Janson.

All in-person screening venues provide sound amplification headphones upon request with venue management. IFC Center can also provide a T-Coil loop for compatible devices.

WORLD PREMIERE An ode to the enduring love and raw humor between a sharp-tongued, famous Korean cook and her devoted youngest son. Told from his autobiographical perspective, the film moves fluidly across time, weaving memories, caregiving rituals, funeral rites, and art into a lyrical meditation on grief. With tenderness and wit, it reveals how loss transforms into creativity and how intergenerational bonds persist beyond death. - Ruth Somalo

The first screening will be followed by a Q&A with director Seung-pyo Hong, producer Jun Lim, and interpreter Mimi Kim.

All in-person screening venues provide sound amplification headphones upon request with venue management. IFC Center can also provide a T-Coil loop for compatible devices.

US PREMIERE With words like “acorn” and “otter” vanishing from a dictionary, Lost for Words begins a lyrical meditation on language, care, and the more-than-human world. Through poetry and acts of conservation like rewilding and path-building, the film asks how naming fosters knowing, caring, and change. With painterly cinematography and evocative soundscapes, this essayistic work frames the biodiversity crisis as a failure of imagination, offering not despair but tenderness, hope, and a radical call to care. - Ruth Somalo

The first screening will be followed by a Q&A with director Hannah Papacek Harper.

All in-person screening venues provide sound amplification headphones upon request with venue management. IFC Center can also provide a T-Coil loop for compatible devices.