Video & On Demand - Bogancloch (Online)
Bogancloch is where Jake Williams lives, nestled in a vast highland forest of Scotland. The film portrays his life throughout the seasons, with other people occasionally crossing into his otherwise solitary life. At the heart a song, an argument between life and death, each stating their case to rule over the world. The film is without exposition, it aims at something less recognisable, a different existence of reality observed in discrete moments. A sequel to Two Years at Sea (2011), charting a subtly changing life in a radically changing world.
With optional CC descriptive subtitles
86 mins BBFC cert U
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Ben Rivers is an artist and filmmaker represented by Kate MacGarry Gallery in London. Awards include the EYE Art Film Prize, 2016; FIPRESCI International Critics Prize, 68th Venice Film Festival for his first feature film Two Years At Sea; Baloise Art Prize, Art Basel 42, for Sack Barrow; Paul Hamlyn Foundation Award for Artists, 2010; twice winner of the Tiger Award at Rotterdam Film Festival, twice shortlisted for the Jarman Award, and was a Radcliffe Fellow at Harvard University in 2015.
Recent solo shows include Urthworks, Hestercombe Gallery, Somerset; Phantoms, Triennale, Milan; Urth, The Renaissance Society, Chicago; Islands, Kunstverein of Hamburg; Earth Needs More Magicians, Camden Arts Centre, London; The Two Eyes Are Not Brothers, Artangel, London and Whitworth Museum, Manchester.
His work is held in collections including Tate Modern, Hamburg Kunsthalle, FRAC, Ville de Geneve and National Museum of Scotland.
FEATURES | ||
2019 | Krabi, 2562 | Co-directed with Anocha Suwichakornpong |
2015 | The Sky Trembles and the Earth is Afraid and the Two Eyes Are Not Brothers | |
2013 | A Spell to Ward Off the Darkness | Co-directed with Ben Russell |
2011 | Two Years at Sea | |
CAST | ||
As Himself | JAKE WILLIAMS | |
Students as themselves: | EMILY ANDERSON | |
LUCAS BROWN | ||
LOGAN CAMERON | ||
FAY CRAVEN | ||
TYLER CUTTS | ||
BRODIE HENDERSON | ||
KYLA KINGS | ||
AILSA LIPP | ||
DECLAN LORIMER | ||
ROWAN MAY-BLAKE | ||
KAIDEN MILNE | ||
ANGEL NWEKE | ||
CALUM STEPHEN | ||
Choir: | NEREA BELLO | |
SHANE CONNOLLY | ||
ALASDAIR ROBERTS | ||
RACHEL SMILLIE | ||
KENG KENG TANG | ||
TOMÁS DIMBLEBY WEBER | ||
CREW | ||
Written and directed by | BEN RIVERS | |
Producers | JOHN ARCHER, SARAH NEELY, BEN RIVERS | |
Co-Producers | ZSUZSANNA KIRÁLY, HANNA BJÖRK VALSDÓTTIR | |
Executive Producer for Screen Scotland | MARK THOMAS | |
Musical Director | ALASDAIR ROBERTS | |
Sound Recording | LUKE FOWLER, BEN RIVERS, | |
BECKY THOMSON, MARK VERNON | ||
Director of Photography | BEN RIVERS | |
Sound Design | CHU-LI SHEWRING | |
Re-recording Mixer | BJÖRN VIKTORSSON | |
Production Assistant | KIT JONES | |
Stills Photography | LUKE FOWLER, KIT JONES, MARGARET SALMON | |
Archive Researh | GRAEME ARNFIELD | |
Line producer | ISABELLE TILLOU | |
Sound Mixing Facilities | AKKERI STUDIO | |
Aerial Photography | TVP STUDIOS, GREG BARTLET | |
Catering and Technical Support | MHARI ROBERTSON | |
at The Gordon Schools | ||
Film Labs | KODAK FILM LABORATORY | |
Scanning | DIGITAL ORCHARD | |
Post Production Services | THE POST REPUBLIC GmbH | |
In-house Producer | SAVIO DEBERNARDIS | |
Head of Picture | THOMAS LEHMANN | |
Colorist | IVAN MARKOVIĆ | |
Titles | MARCUS JACK | |
Access Materials | SCREEN LANGUAGE | |
Subtitles | BABELFISCH TRANSLATIONS | |
Bookkeeping | JOHANNA BLAIR | |
Accountant | KEN LIVINGSTONE | |
Insurance | WK INSURANCE | |
Thanks to: | Sonny Adamovich, Georgina and Debbi Beeson | |
George Clark, Samuel Clark, Jeremy Cooper, | ||
Deberon Projects, Liza Dimbleby, Gareth Evans, | ||
La Fetiche, Luke Fowler, Struan and Isla Gardner, | ||
Paul Harnden Shoemakers, James Holcombe, | ||
Jolanka Höhn, Caroline Lawrence, Ruhan Lottering, | ||
Helen Mans, Bob Mean and The Gordon Schools, Huntly | ||
Martin McGlone, Benjamin Mirguet, Kirsten Niehuus, | ||
Timi Oladeji, Andrea Queralt, Dan Redrup, | ||
Michael Reuter, Ben Russell, Margaret Salmon, | ||
Corin Sworn, Antoine Thirion, Mhairi Valentine, | ||
Con Weber, Harry Wilson, Ricky Wood, Oliver Zeller, | ||
Andrea Luka Zimmerman | ||
Blue Skies', composed by Irving Berlin, 1926 | ||
The Underground' by Seamus Heaney, | ||
From Station Island (Faber, 1984) | ||
©The Estate of Seamus Heaney, 1984. | ||
The Flyting o' Life and Daith', | ||
words by Hamish Henderson, 1965. | ||
Tune by Alison McMorland. | ||
Harmony arrangement by Alasdair Roberts | ||
When They Laid You in the Ground' | ||
composed and performed by Dave Goulder and Liz Dyer, | ||
with the Broken Consort, 1971 | ||
Singing in the Bathtub', composed by Michael H Cleary, | ||
with lyrics by Herb Magidson and Ned Washington, | ||
for the musical film The Show of Shows | ||
(dir. John G. Adolfi, Warner Bros, 1929) | ||
Supported by the National Lottery through Screen Scotland | ||
For Screen Scotland | ||
Executive Director | ISABEL DAVIS | |
Head of Unscripted | DANI CARLAW | |
Head of Production | STEVEN LITTLE | |
Legal Manager | MARK WILSON | |
Legal Services | NEIL GILLARD, WIGGIN LLP | |
Additional funding from" | MEDIENBOARD BERLIN-BRANDENBURG | |
ICELANDIC FILM CENTRE | ||
Director | GÍSLI SNÆR ERLINGSSON | |
Consultant | HELGA BREKKAN | |
FidMarseille | FIDLAB 2021, KODAK - SILVERWAY PRIZE | |
©Urth Productions 2024 | ||
Running time 86 minutes | ||
In English / UK, Germany, Iceland | ||
World Premiere Locarno Competition |
"A distinctive non-fiction account of the daily life on one Jake Williams, a bearded hermit native to the Scottish Highlands who'd taken the decision to opt out of polite society many years before that society got far less polite. For him, this is a way of life; for his director, a source of ongoing fascination; for us, a break from the hyperaccelerated norm, be that AI boosterism, the endless bellowing about borders, or the quest for upward mobility in a society that doesn't - and won't - allow it. I don't think I entirely grasped what Two Years at Sea represented back in 2011; in 2025, it would be impossible not to notice, appreciate, even cherish it.'
Mike McCahill, Cinésthesia
★★★★
'The lure of the Scottish wilderness...It's over a decade later and we're back in the wood with Jake, still eking out a happy existence in his tumbledown shack and drinking in the pleasures of the rugged and serene landscape. In the climatic shot...he warms up the water in an old tin bath and just marinates there, this time the camera itself floating away like a bubble caught on the breeze eaving us with another vision of blissful contentment.'
David Jenkins, Little White Lies
★★★★★
'The crispy crackle of kindling as it catches, the wind in the pines, the creaks and groans of an old caravan suspension as it trundles unwittingly pulled down a track, the chew and slurp of a meal heartily consumed, and the birdsong that floats above all the other sounds. Rivers has found a fascinating muse in Jake, and does the man's story justice. A truly moving and beautiful experience, this gentle exploration offers an escape route from the mayhem of Modernity.'
Dan Carrier, Camden New Journal, West End Extra, Islington Tribute
'Ben Rivers is primarily an artist, and it shows. Every frame of Bogancloch is treated as a work of art and the viewer is given ample time to relish the beauty of the framing, lighting and composition. Many of the shots fall into traditional categories such as still life, landscape and portraiture and would work equally well as photographs. As a visual poem that invites you to question what makes for a meaningful life, Bogancloch is an absolute joy. And the final scene (which I won't divulge) is a jaw-dropping delight.'
Sarah Kent, The Arts Desk
'This austere, mediative collage of glimpses of the solitary life of Scottish hermit Jake Williams feels unusally in tune wit the natural world. Williams rarely speaks, but as we watch him tenderlly coaxing seedlings into the loam, we get a sense of a man who has found peace.'
Wendy Ide, The Observer
★★★★
'A haunting film brimming with transcendent imagery.'
Rivers crafts the kind of cinema that is the absolute antithesis of today's hyperactive online culture. And like the late, great Jonas Mekas and fellow UK filmmaker Mark Jenkins, Rivers painstakingly hand develops the celluloid in his studio. In this regard, Rivers creates some of the most impressionist and downright transcendent images in cinema today.'
Adam Stafford, The Skinny
★★★★
'For those with an eye for slow cinema, experimental editing, and an intimate depiction of a quiet life, this film is exceptional.
The journey ends with a fascinating long take that does justice to the slow cinema technique seen in Bresson's Pickpocket and Tarkovsky's Mirror.'
Justin Bower, Loud and Clear
"Fascinating.' Spectacular final shot.'
"Not quite a documentary and not quite a work of fiction either, this is a contemplative curio...."
Lesley Felperin, The Guardian
'Ben Rivers' glorious new film continues his fascination with a Scottish forest-dweller. The pleasure of the film is that, if you are willing to spend some time with Jake on his own terms, there is an ease that comes with it.'
John Bleasdale, Sight & Sound
★★★★
'A pleasant one to sit through'
'Shot on 16mm, admittedly slow moving, but the minutiae - from the tapes Williams plays, to the bath he has set for himself outside his domicile - makes for compelling, even hypnotic, viewing, particularly the night scenes which are typically done around a bonfire. The cinematography is the documentary's greatest strength giving it a coating rarely seen in this field of movie-making..'
Eoghan Lyng, Dirty Movies
'Entrancing. Invites contemplation and defies comprehension. Like the best of cinema -or, at least, the kind I respond to most passionately - the films of Ben Rivers immerse us in stories that aren't as interested in solving enigmas as letting us luxuriate in them. With its capacity to wring bliss and beauty out of the most mundane routines, the film approximates something close to what Herzog once called "ecstatic truth" - that mysterious, elusive type of truth that can only be reached through imagination.'
Leonardo Goi, The Film Stage
'...an especially beautiful illustration of the insight that documentary realism needn’t preclude wild flights of fancy.'
Max Goldberg, Film Comment
★★★★
'If it wasn't for the excellent, immersive sound design from Chu-Li Shewring, you could easily believe you were watching a piece of silent movie found footage.'
Amber Wilkinson, Eye For Film
'There is less of the whimsy here that was in Two Years at Sea which included magical realist moments of levitation. Our perspective is still ultimately drawn up into the sky, but in a manner that, as our attention is turned towards the light of the cosmos, emphasises the humble scale of all on our planet, and one human's life.'
Carmen Gray, The Film Verdict
★★★★
'This is a film of purity, of both vision and existence. At times there is a dancing sense of kinesis at the edge of the frame that makes it seem like remembrance of things past while being situated in the real. A flickering in sparks and electricity that indicates the flickering flame of Brechtian doubt which proves the real.'
Meredith Taylor, Fimuforia
'Bogancloch aligns with the principle of slow cinema, eschewing plot in favor of focussing on seemingly insignificant details. Nature plays a crucial role in Williams' life, and his wanderings through the landscape offer moments of mediative tranquillity. Living off the grid, Williams embraces a lifestyle free of modern anxieties and distractions, embodying a return to basics reminiscent of Thoreau's Walden in a world increasingly dominated by data and algorithms.'
Martin Kudlac, Screen Anarchy
'Ben Rivers' glorious new film continues his fascination with a Scottish forest-dweller. Bogancloch is an intimate and poignant yet wholly unsentimental story about a man who's fighting to defend his own freedom.'
Muriel Del Don, Cineuropa
'Ben Rivers' elusive and lyrical documentary...timeless almost mythical. In the film's most haunting moment, a choir visit and by firelight sing the Hamish Henerson Scottish poem 'The Flyting o'Life and Daith' about the ebb and pull between life and death.'
David Willoughby, The Crack Magazine
'It's a blessing that Ben Rivers wanted to visit this man's life again, and his flowing filmmaking style is still bewitchingly gripping.'
Ali Ercivan, International Cinephile Society
'There is a lot of emotional nourishment to be gained from settling into it... Down to its marvel of a closing shot – a long bird’s-eye view of Williams’ house and forest surroundings that ultimately transitions into a picture of distant galaxies – Bogancloch movingly pays homage to the solace and joy that can be found in the fact that the cosmos is vast, uncaring, and beautiful.'
Alan Mattli, FilmExplorer
Ben Rivers and Jake Williams at Edinburgh FF 2024 (Video)
Download Pressbook
Download photo set
Trailer on YouTube (link or embed)
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Interview with Ben Rivers from Locarno (YouTube)
Variety interview by Jamie Lang with Ben Rivers
Interview with Ben Rivers by Arta Barzanji in Ultra Dogme
Ben Rivers Interview with Michael Sicinski in In Review Online
The Hollywood Reporter interview with Ben Rivers by Georg Szalal
Eye for Film Interview by Paul Risker with Ben Rivers
Ben Rivers website
International pressbook