Fieldwalk
Digging up the present, Callum Mackenzie Allen's "Fieldwalk" is an enactment of history-writing in reverse. Depicting a walk in Southern England's coastal landscape that includes 'excavations', using an archaeologist’s planning frame, of relics belonging to the current century, the film interrogates the possible effect of such artefacts on the area’s future inhabitants. Digging up the present, Callum Mackenzie Allen's "Fieldwalk" is an enactment of history-writing in reverse. Depicting a walk in Southern England's coastal landscape that includes 'excavations', using an archaeologist’s planning frame, of relics belonging to the current century, the film interrogates the possible effect of such artefacts on the area’s future inhabitants. Digging up the present, Callum Mackenzie Allen's "Fieldwalk" is an enactment of history-writing in reverse. Depicting a walk in Southern England's coastal landscape that includes 'excavations', using an archaeologist’s planning frame, of relics belonging to the current century, the film interrogates the possible effect of such artefacts on the area’s future inhabitants. Digging up the present, Callum Mackenzie Allen's "Fieldwalk" is an enactment of history-writing in reverse. Depicting a walk in Southern England's coastal landscape that includes 'excavations', using an archaeologist’s planning frame, of relics belonging to the current century, the film interrogates the possible effect of such artefacts on the area’s future inhabitants.