Skip to main content
yanco Home
Menu
  • Home
  • watch
  • magazine
  • calendar
  • index
  • Subscribe
Search Log in
  • nl
  • en
You are here
  • Home
  • index

index

a constantly growing and annotated catalogue of all the short films featured in our releases, publications, or screenings

Grid List
  • Date added
  • A-Z
  • Asc
  • Desc
Arbeiter verlassen die Fabrik
Arbeiter verlassen die Fabrik (Harun Farocki, 1995)
Read more
458

Workers Leaving the Factory

Harun Farocki, Germany, 1995, 36’

In this documentary essay, Harun Farocki shows that the famous Lumière brothers’ sequence of the same title already carries within itself the germ of a foreseeable social development: the eventual disappearance of this form of industrial labour.

Read more
Tale of Tales
Tale of Tales (Yuri Norstein, 1979)
Read more
457

Tale of Tales

Yuri Norstein, Soviet Union, 1979, 29’

A poetic amalgam of Yuri Norstein’s memories, hopes, and fears for the future. Tale of Tales depicts his post-war childhood, remnants of the personal tragedies of war, and the little wolf character in the lullaby his mother used to sing.

Read more
Mothlight
Mothlight (Stan Brakhage, 1963)
Read more
456

Mothlight

Stan Brakhage, USA, 1963, 4’

Mothlight was created by painstakingly collaging bits and pieces of organic matter—moth wings, most notably, as well as flowers, seeds, leaves, and blades of grass—and sandwiching them between two layers of clear 16-mm Mylar editing tape.

Read more
The Wagoner
Borom Sarret (Ousmane Sembène, 1963)
Read more
455

The Wagoner

Ousmane Sembène, France, Senegal, 1963, 18’

Ousmane Sembène’s first film uses a mixture of documentary and fiction techniques to tell the story of a young cart-driver in Dakar. The Wagoner illustrates the continent’s poverty, showing that independence has not solved the problems of its people.

Read more
Superstar: The Karen Carpenter Story
Superstar: The Karen Carpenter Story (Todd Haynes, 1987)
Read more
454

Superstar: The Karen Carpenter Story

Todd Haynes, USA, 1987, 43’

This postmodern retelling of Karen Carpenter’s affliction by anorexia enraged her family and initially got the film banned. Blending archival material, artificial talking heads, and Barbie-doll reenactments, Todd Haynes criticises the objectification of female celebrities.

Read more
Atlantiques
Atlantiques (Mati Diop, 2009)
Read more
453

Atlantiques

Mati Diop, France, Senegal, 2009, 16’

Mati Diop’s experimental documentary Atlantiques is a precursor but also a narrative sidestep to what would become her feature debut, Atlantics, ten years later. A group of young Senegalese men discusses a possible attempt to cross the ocean to Spain.

Read more
Spacy
Spacy (Takashi Ito, 1981)
Read more
452

Spacy

Takashi Ito, Japan, 1981, 10’

Spacy elaborates the concept of ‘infinite regress’ through a zoom-in to a grandstand on which animated photos show a zoom of the same stand, ad infinitum, with reverses and variations. All its components—location, illusion, and time—are strictly combined in an endless cycle, like a Möbius strip or an Escher film, in a Japanese tempo, from slow to fast.

Read more
Neighbours
Neighbours (Norman McLaren, 1952)
Read more
451

Neighbours

Norman McLaren, Canada, 1952, 9’

Norman McLaren applies the principles used to animate drawings or puppets to animate live actors. Neighbours is a parable about two people who come to blows over the possession of a flower. The political context shifts depending on the viewers’ personal positions.

Read more
Tongues Untied
Tongues Untied (Marlon Riggs, 1989)
Read more
450

Tongues Untied

Marlon Riggs, USA, 1989, 55’

A polemical, avowedly personal video documentary on the American Black gay experience. Marlon Riggs celebrates Black men loving Black men as a revolutionary act.

Read more
Les Mains négatives
Les Mains négatives (Marguerite Duras, 1978)
Read more
449

Les Mains négatives

Marguerite Duras, France, 1978, 14’

Marguerite Duras takes us on a nighttime car ride through an unpopulated Paris in mid-August, in a single, uninterrupted shot from inside the car. From the end of night till dawn, a depopulated Paris soothes itself with Duras’ affecting voice-over, accompanied by cello accords.

Read more
The Little Girl Who Sold the Sun
La petite vendeuse de soleil (Djibril Diop Mambéty, 1999)
Read more
448

The Little Girl Who Sold the Sun

Djibril Diop Mambéty, France, Senegal, Switzerland, 1999, 45’

A girl from a shantytown travels to the city to become an itinerant newspaper vendor. Mambety’s richly textured view of urban life fuses fiction and documentary, displaying the rampant poverty and endemic misogyny in the modernising capital of Dakar.

Read more
Reassemblage: From the Firelight to the Screen
Reassemblage: From the Firelight to the Screen (Trinh T. Minh-ha, 1983)
Read more
447

Reassemblage: From the Firelight to the Screen

Trịnh T. Minh-hà, Senegal, USA, 1983, 40’

What is Senegal exactly? Reassemblage: From the Firelight to the Screen is a film about its people and, at the same time, a reflection on the conventions of ethnographic cinema. It shows the mechanisms of manipulation in the seventh art form.

Read more
Hedgehog in the Fog
Hedgehog in the Fog (Yuri Norstein, 1975)
Read more
446

Hedgehog in the Fog

Yuri Norstein, Soviet Union, 1975, 11’

As a heavy fog shrouds the wild woods, a helpless hedgehog starts wandering in the powdery mist. Will the young visitor find his way home? Hedgehog in the Fog has generated its own lore, and there is even a monument to the hedgehog in Kyiv.

Read more
The Burden
The Burden (Niki Lindroth von Bahr, 2017)
Read more
445

The Burden

Niki Lindroth von Bahr, Sweden, 2017, 15’

On a lonely planet, a musical is enacted in a modern marketplace. The employees of various commercial venues, portrayed as anthropomorphic animals, cope with boredom and existential anxiety by performing cheerful showtunes.

Read more
The Wrong Trousers
The Wrong Trousers (Nick Park, 1993)
Read more
444

The Wrong Trousers

Nick Park, United Kingdom, 1993, 30’

In the Oscar-winning The Wrong Trousers, the kind-hearted, cheese-loving bachelor and inventor Wallace rents out his loyal and intelligent anthropomorphic dog’s bedroom to a penguin.

Read more
At Land
At Land (Maya Deren, 1944)
Read more
443

At Land

Maya Deren, USA, 1944, 15’

In the dream-like narrative of At Land, a woman, played by filmmaker Maya Deren herself, is washed up on a beach and goes on a strange journey, encountering other versions of herself. Deren described the film as about the struggle to maintain one’s personal identity.

Read more
Hapax Legomena I: Nostalgia
Hapax Legomena I: Nostalgia (Hollis Frampton, 1971)
Read more
442

Hapax Legomena I: Nostalgia

Hollis Frampton, USA, 1971, 36’

In Hapax Legomena I: Nostalgia, Hollis Frampton presents 12 pictures and reminisces about them. After about a minute, the photos catch fire and burn to ashes. Memory and anticipation merge.

Read more
World of Glory
World of Glory (Roy Andersson, 1991)
Read more
441

World of Glory

Roy Andersson, Sweden, 1991, 17’

At the outskirts of a city, a group of people stands around a lorry. Naked men, women, and children are herded in through the rear door of the vehicle. Once the door is locked, a gentleman takes a hose and connects it from the exhaust pipe to the lorry’s interior.

Read more
Black Panthers
Black Panthers (Agnès Varda, 1968)
Read more
440

Black Panthers

Agnès Varda, France, 1968, 28’

In 1967, Agnès Varda was living in California when one of the Black Panthers founders, Huey P. Newton, was arrested during a traffic stop for killing a police officer—a clear case of racial injustice, according to the Panthers. The following summer, Varda took her 16mm camera to a “Free Huey” demonstration in Oakland.

Read more
Workers Leaving the Lumière Factory
La Sortie de l’usine Lumière à Lyon (Louis Lumière, 1895)
Read more
439

Workers Leaving the Lumière Factory

Louis Lumière, France, 1’

A man opens the large gate of the Lumière factory in Lyon, France, in 1895. Through the gate and a smaller door next to it, workers stream out for lunch. Once all the workers have left the factory, the gatekeeper closes the gate again.

Read more
Isle of Flowers
Isle of Flowers (Jorge Furtado, 1989)
Read more
438

Isle of Flowers

Jorge Furtado, Brazil, 1989, 13’

Isle of Flowers shows the cycles of modern life. Very soon, it becomes evident that something is rotten in the capitalist system as a whole. Since its release, the film has lost none of its visual significance or topicality.

Read more
The Vampires of Poverty
The Vampires of Poverty (Carlos Mayolo & Luis Ospina, 1977)
Read more
437

The Vampires of Poverty

Carlos Mayolo, Luis Ospina, Colombia, 1977, 29’

The Vampires of Poverty is an action film masquerading as a documentary about filmmakers who exploit poverty for profit, with a touch of black humour, but most of all a scathing critique against ‘misery porn’ and the opportunism of those filmmakers who make ‘socio-political’ films in the Third World to make money and win prizes in Europe.

Read more
The Red Balloon
Le Ballon rouge (Albert Lamorisse, 1956)
Read more
436

The Red Balloon

Albert Lamorisse, France, 1956, 34’

A red balloon with a mind of its own follows a little boy around the streets of Paris. This beguiling allegory of innocence and transcendence is the only short film ever to win an Oscar for best original screenplay.

Read more
The Inextinguishable Fire
Nicht löschbares Feuer (Harun Farocki, 1969)
Read more
435

The Inextinguishable Fire

Harun Farocki, Germany, 1969, 22’

Made early in the prolific artist's nearly fifty-year career, The Inextinguishable Fire is a critique of the Vietnam War and the role of industry in the production of chemical weapons. In analysing the production, dissemination, and consumption of images, Harun Farocki reveals the inextricable links between media culture, politics, technology, and violence.

Read more
Dimensions of Dialogue
Dimensions of Dialogue (Jan Švankmajer, 1983)
Read more
434

Dimensions of Dialogue

Jan Švankmajer, Czechoslovakia, 1983, 12’

Dimensions of Dialogue doesn’t present us with models of meaningful human understanding; on the contrary, we are given three examples which clearly demonstrate that communication can and will break down. During this 12-minute magnum opus, Jan Švankmajer demonstrates his virtuosity and limitless invention by shifting his artistic style and animation techniques three times.

Read more
Tango
Tango (Zbigniew Rybczyński, 1981)
Read more
433

Tango

Zbigniew Rybczyński, Poland, 1981, 8’

Zbigniew Rybczynski worked eight hours a day for ten months on the Oscar-winning Tango. He brings together a jumble of cut-out photos featuring countless figures of all kinds and ages in a flawlessly synchronised animation. The work was formally highly innovative at the time.

Read more
Wasp
Wasp (Andrea Arnold, 2003)
Read more
432

Wasp

Andrea Arnold, United Kingdom, 2003, 26’

Wasp follows a single mother too young to have four children, and too poor to feed them. This Oscar-winning short film was shot in Dartford, a south-east London working-class suburb, where filmmaker Andrea Arnold grew up.

Read more
Le Voyage dans la Lune
Le Voyage dans la Lune (Georges Méliès, 1902)
Read more
431

A Trip to the Moon

Georges Méliès, France, 1902, 15’

The black-and-white science fiction film from 1902 has since become a canonical work. A Trip to the Moon was hugely popular upon its original release and used animation and visual effects that were very innovative at the time.

Read more
Outer Space
Outer Space (Peter Tscherkassky, 1999)
Read more
430

Outer Space

Peter Tscherkassky, Austria, 1999, 11’

In Outer Space, a woman no longer fights an unknown entity, but that portion of the filmstrip that is normally unseen when film is projected—the “outer space” of the film’s image, consisting of the optical soundtrack and its perforations.

Read more
The Girl Chewing Gum
The Girl Chewing Gum (John Smith, 1976)
Read more
429

The Girl Chewing Gum

John Smith, United Kingdom, 1976, 12’

An authoritative voice-over pre-empts the events in the image, seeming to order not only the people, cars, and moving objects on the screen but also the actual camera movements on the street in view. John Smith draws attention to how controlling and directional the practice of voice-over actually is.

Read more
Wavelength
Wavelength (Michael Snow, 1967)
Read more
428

Wavelength

Michael Snow, Canada, USA, 1967, 45’

Wavelength consists of almost no action. The film’s spine is its famous zoom from a fixed camera position. The spectator is led to concentrate on this central element, the photograph, until the image is washed out and the film comes to an end.

Read more
Nuit et brouillard
Nuit et brouillard (Alain Resnais, 1955)
Read more
427

Night and Fog

Alain Resnais, France, 1955, 32’

Alain Resnais combines poignant black-and-white archive footage of the Holocaust, such as mass graves and systematic destruction, with colour footage of the empty camp grounds of Auschwitz and Majdanek in 1955. Night and Fog raises critical questions about collective memory and the tendency to forget.

Read more
Mobile Men
Mobile Men (Apichatpong Weerasethakul, 2008)
Read more
426

Mobile Men

Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Thailand, 2008, 4’

Two young men in a pickup truck, from different parts of the world, discover each other through the use of a camera. As the camera lenses change, a landscape of rice fields and a cinema crew get into the frame. The camera then reshoots the road and the men, as if we were witnessing a film rehearsal.

Read more
Rubber Coated Steel
Rubber Coated Steel (Lawrence Abu Hamdan, 2017)
Read more
181

Rubber Coated Steel

Lawrence Abu Hamdan, Germany, Lebanon, 2017, 22’

In 2014, artist and forensic audio analyst Lawrence Abu Hamdan examined audio files of the shots that killed Nadeem Nawara and Mohamed Abu Daher in the West Bank of Palestine. Rubber Coated Steel does not preside over the voices of the victims but seeks to amplify their silence.

Read more
La Coquille et le Clergyman
La Coquille et le Clergyman (Germaine Dulac, 1928)
Read more
425

The Seashell and the Clergyman

Germaine Dulac, France, 1928, 41’

Germaine Dulac’s The Seashell and the Clergyman was arguably the first surrealist film ever made. The film tells the story of a clergyman who falls madly in love with a beautiful woman, but must defeat an equally eager rival.

Read more
Grandmamauntsistercat
Grandmamauntsistercat (Zuza Banasińska, 2024)
Read more
424

Grandmamauntsistercat

Zuza Banasińska, Poland, The Netherlands, 2024, 23’

Zuza Banasińska reinvents the famous Slavic witch Baba Yaga through a clever montage of films from the Polish Educational Film Studio archive, containing sexist content. Questioning their own non-binary identity, they unleash the queer dimension of found footage tasked with conveying a normative conception of identity.

Read more
Arnulf Rainer
Arnulf Rainer (Peter Kubelka, 1960)
Read more
423

Arnulf Rainer

Peter Kubelka, Austria, 1960, 7’

Today, the flicker film Arnulf Rainer is still a landmark in the history of cinema. In this radical work, Peter Kubelka reduced cinema to its simplest form of expression: each frame is composed of light or darkness, silence or sound.

Read more
Uncle Yanco
Uncle Yanco (Agnès Varda, 1967)
Read more
397

Uncle Yanco

Agnès Varda, France, 1967, 18’

While in San Francisco to promote her latest film, Agnès Varda gets a tip from an acquaintance. In Sausalito, a town in the San Francisco Bay Area, there lives a Greek painter named Jean Varda. Could they be related?

Read more
Solidarity
Solidarity (Joyce Wieland, 1973)
Read more
422

Solidarity

Joyce Wieland, Canada, 1973, 11’

A film on the Dare strike of the early 1970s. Hundreds of feet and legs marching and picketing with the word ‘solidarity’ superimposed on the screen. Like Wieland’s earlier films, Solidarity uniquely combines political awareness with an aesthetic viewpoint and a sense of humour.

Read more
Aqueronte
Aqueronte (Manuel Muñoz Rivas, 2023)
Read more
421

Aqueronte

Manuel Muñoz Rivas, Spain, 2023, 26’

Manuel Muñoz Rivas turns the daily passage of a ferry on a Spanish river into a ritual crossing of sacred beauty, as the passengers’ souls wander through suspended narrations of everyday life.

Read more
All My Life
All My Life (Bruce Baillie, 1966)
Read more
420

All My Life

Bruce Baillie, USA, 1966, 3’

All My Life is a 3-minute pan movement that opens on an old picket fence framed by the blue sky above and a stretch of summer-brown grass below. On the soundtrack, you can hear the crackle and hiss of an old record. Soon, Ella Fitzgerald starts singing “All My Life” in a 1936 session with the pianist Teddy Wilson.

Read more
Ten Meter Tower
Ten Meter Tower (Maximilien Van Aertryck & Axel Danielson, 2016)
Read more
419

Ten Meter Tower

Axel Danielson, Maximilien Van Aertryck, Sweden, 2016, 17’

A ten-metre-high diving board. People climb up: to leap or to climb down? Ten Meter Tower is an entertaining study of human vulnerability.

Read more
Stay Awake, Be Ready
Stay Awake, Be Ready (Phạm Thiên Ân, 2019)
Read more
418

Stay Awake, Be Ready

Phạm Thiên Ân, South Korea, USA, Vietnam, 2019, 14’

Filmed over a single unbroken take, this work brings together slice-of-life vignettes. On a busy street corner, three young men have a conversation over food. Suddenly, a motorcycle crash occurs nearby. As the crowd clears, a young boy performs street tricks and a beer girl plies her trade.

Read more
One Hundred Children Waiting for a Train
One Hundred Children Waiting for a Train (Ignacio Agüero, 1988)
Read more
417

One Hundred Children Waiting for a Train

Ignacio Agüero, Chile, United Kingdom, 1988, 57’

Each Saturday, historian and activist Alicia Vega transforms the chapel of Lo Hermida into a screening room for about a hundred children. They have never seen an actual movie, and in her workshop, they learn more about cinema. Through watching films, the children discover a larger reality and a different world.

Read more
The Big Shave
The Big Shave (Martin Scorsese, 1967)
Read more
416

The Big Shave

Martin Scorsese, USA, 1967, 6’

A pristine white bathroom soon becomes a site of crimson-stained shaving carnage in Martin Scorsese’s daring student film, a potent and disturbing allegory for the horrors of the Vietnam War. What starts out as a pleasant morning soon goes horribly wrong, turning into a bloody spectacle of self-mutilation.

Read more
Phantoms of Nabua
Phantoms of Nabua (Apichatpong Weerasethakul, 2009)
Read more
415

Phantoms of Nabua

Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Germany, Thailand, United Kingdom, 2009, 11’

During the Cold War, the Thai village of Nabua was accused of harbouring communists. Its inhabitants were subject to violent reprisals. Phantoms of Nabua evokes these atrocities, but does so under a luminous guise.

Read more
The War Game
The War Game (Peter Watkins, 1966)
Read more
414

The War Game

Peter Watkins, United Kingdom, 1966, 48’

The War Game presents a fictional scenario concerning the consequences of an explosion in Kent following the escalation of an East-West conflict. The BBC withdrew its support, stating that “the effect of the film is considered too horrific for television broadcast”. The film had a significant impact on the growing campaign for nuclear disarmament.

Read more
Nest
Nest (Hlynur Pálmason, 2022)
Read more
413

Nest

Hlynur Pálmason, Denmark, Iceland, 2022, 22’

Between 2020 and 2021, the Icelandic filmmaker Hlynur Pálmason filmed his three children building a tree house in their backyard. Using a fixed frame, his lockdown project yielded a fascinating study of the seasons grounded in the leisurely rhythms of kids at play.

Read more
La Soufrière: Warten auf eine unausweichliche Katastrophe
La Soufrière: Warten auf eine unausweichliche Katastrophe (Werner Herzog, 1977)
Read more
412

La Soufrière: Waiting for an Inevitable Catastrophe

Werner Herzog, Germany, Guadeloupe, 1977, 31’

In 1976, the announcement of the imminent eruption of La Soufrière, Guadeloupe’s main volcano, left Basse-Terre completely depopulated. Werner Herzog travels there with his team and two cameramen as the danger reaches its peak.

Read more
Two
Two (Satyajit Ray, 1965)
Read more
411

Two

Satyajit Ray, India, 1965, 12’

A rich boy is playing alone with his enormous collection of expensive toys. When he looks out the window, he sees a poor boy on the street, also playing alone. They duel, each showing off their toys in a bid to outdo the other. Satyajit Ray called Two a ‘film fable’.

Read more
Powers of Ten
Powers of Ten (Ray Eames & Charles Eames, 1977)
Read more
410

Powers of Ten

Charles Eames, Ray Eames, USA, 1977, 9’

A man is sitting on a picnic blanket in a Chicago park on Lake Michigan. He is filmed from above. Every 10 seconds, the camera zooms out by a factor of 10. Finally, we see the entire universe, with constellations floating around like clouds of cream in ink-black coffee.

Read more
Nazarbazi
Nazarbazi (Maryam Tafakory, 2022)
Read more
409

Nazarbazi

Maryam Tafakory, Iran, United Kingdom, 2022, 19’

After the revolution in 1979, Iran prohibited the depiction on the silver screen of men and women touching. Since then, directors have relied on every cinematic trick in the book to mirror ecstatic tension—but often the game of glances is enough to set a scene ablaze. Nazarbazi collages these intense cinematic moments into a poem about love and desire in Iranian film, which also echoes our own pandemic time of physical distancing.

Read more
Measures of Distance
Measures of Distance (Mona Hatoum, 1988)
Read more
408

Measures of Distance

Mona Hatoum, Canada, United Kingdom, 1988, 15’

Letters from a Palestinian woman living in war-torn Lebanon to her daughter, whom she has not seen for years, and a series of photographs convey the effects of war and exile on their personal and cultural life, with a nuanced look at family relationships.

Read more
Ever is Over All
Ever is Over All (Pipilotti Rist, 1997)
Read more
407

Ever is Over All

Pipilotti Rist, Switzerland, USA, 1997, 4’

In Ever is Over All, Pipilotti Rist juxtaposes the field and its flowers with her magically powerful wand, and transposes acts of aggression and annihilation into benevolent and creative ones. An anarchic young woman gleefully breaks windows.

Read more
Creature Comforts
Creature Comforts (Nick Park, 1989)
Read more
406

Creature Comforts

Nick Park, United Kingdom, 1989, 5’

In this short animated film by Wallace and Gromit creator Nick Park, various zoo animals are interviewed about their living conditions. The film points to issues regarding the living conditions of wild animals, but succeeds in doing so with a lot of humour.

Read more
Nicht versöhnt oder Es hilft nur Gewalt, wo Gewalt herrscht
Nicht versöhnt oder Es hilft nur Gewalt, wo Gewalt herrscht (Jean-Marie Straub & Danièle Huillet, 1966)
Read more
405

Not Reconciled

Jean-Marie Straub & Danièle Huillet, Germany, 1966, 55’

Jean-Marie Straub and Danièle Huillet’s first major film introduced their grippingly sparse, elliptical style to international audiences. Not Reconciled brought an intense sense of the present to this narrative of three architects reckoning with their family’s traumatic wartime history.

Read more
Irani Bag
Irani Bag (Maryam Tafakory, 2021)
Read more
404

Irani Bag

Maryam Tafakory, Iran, 2021, 8’

Irani Bag is a split-screen video essay that questions the alleged innocence of handbags in post-revolutionary Iranian cinema. In doing so, Maryam Tafakory provides a robust political analysis of censorship and intimacy.

Read more
Salut les Cubains
Salut les Cubains (Agnès Varda, 1963)
Read more
403

Salut les Cubains

Agnès Varda, Cuba, France, 1963, 30’

During her vacation in Cuba in 1963, four years after Fidel Castro came to power, Agnès Varda made a photo report about Cuban society and culture after the revolution. This delightful black-and-white composition makes the edit resemble a choreography and intermingles the photos with catchy Cuban rhythms.

Read more
Blue
Blue (Apichatpong Weerasethakul, 2018)
Read more
402

Blue

Apichatpong Weerasethakul, France, 2018, 12’

A woman lies awake at night. Nearby, a set of theatre backdrops unspools itself, unveiling two alternate landscapes. Upon the woman’s blue sheet, a flicker of light reflects and illuminates her realm of insomnia.

Read more
Begone Dull Care
Begone Dull Care (Norman McLaren & Evelyn Lambart, 1949)
Read more
401

Begone Dull Care

Evelyn Lambart, Norman McLaren, Canada, 1949, 8’

Begone Dull Care brings a wild piece of music to life with abstract expressionist animation. Evelyn Lambart and Norman McLaren painted colours, shapes, and transformations directly onto their filmstrip, impossible to simulate with digital tools.

Read more

Pagination

  • First page « First
  • Previous page ‹‹
  • Page 2 of 4
  • Next page ››
  • Last page Last »

Subscribe to our monthly newsletter for updates on new releases, publications, and events!

Subscribe

yanco is a magazine and streaming library for short-form moving image

kortfilm.be vzw
Boondaalse Steenweg 249
1050 Elsene
BE 0478 441 315
info@yanco.be

with the support of the Flanders Audiovisual Fund (VAF) of the Flemish Government

VAF
  • about
  • colophon
  • privacy policy
Facebook Instagram LinkedIn YouTube Letterboxd
design by de Ronners
website by eps en kaas