France (no dialogue)
Three shores is the portrait of an imaginary river. By crossing it, from east to west, or by making a detour to the south, from red to green, from the undergrowth to the city, to its industrial zone: the film attempts to map the functioning and organization of our society through the time of flowing water.
"Each shot is filmed on foot to the limit of its narration, to the exhaustion of the image. This bias interests me to work on the entrances and exits of the field, the micro-events which usually remain invisible. I like to show seeing the landscape while thinking. In any case, this is the feeling that duration can make the viewer experience, when the different relationships and transformations that exist within a landscape are highlighted. And I believe this is the great strength of digital technology, the beauty of relationships. I don't make films to draw conclusions, but on the contrary, to accept things, to listen. Because who seeks finds, as Ackerman said, and finds too well, close to his cliché. With this film, I hope that each viewer will be able to form their own idea of what makes up the life of a river, and of this land use planning."