
C.W. Winter
Directing
Known For

This enigmatic, mysterious minimalist feature, a collaboration between CalArts graduate C.W. Winter and photographer Anders Edström, combines elements of narrative fiction, documentary, and even installation art in depicting the daily routine of Ulla, a middle-aged woman living in self-sufficient isolation on a wild island on the Stockholm archipelago.
The Anchorage

An eight-hour fiction shot for a total of twenty-seven weeks, over a period of fourteen months, in a village population forty-seven in the mountains of Kyoto Prefecture, Japan. It is a geographic description of the work and non-work of a farmer. A portrait, over five seasons, of a family, of a terrain, of a soundscape, and of duration itself. A film-as-adaptive-landscape. A georgic in five books.
The Works and Days (of Tayoko Shiojiri in the Shiotani Basin)

Derek and Karen are at home. They do some work, have lunch, watch television, go for a walk, sometimes play the guitar. A response to Jean-Luc Godard's One Plus One (1968).