5.752.414.468

5.752.414.468

Installation / 3 Channel video / Speakers / 115min. / 2020-2021

“5.752.414.468” explores Case no. ARB/12/12 of the ICSID (International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes, an organisation of the World Bank group) between Vattenfall (Swedish energy company) and the Federal Republic of Germany.
Due to the nuclear accident at Fukushima, the German federal government decided a 13th Amendment to the Nuclear Energy Law aiming to phase out nuclear energy faster. Vattenfall, who operates several nuclear power plants in Germany, filed a request with ICSID against that political decision, demanding 5,752414468 billion Euro in compensation.
The first 10-day hearing of the arbitration was live streamed, with a censorship delay of 4 hours. For the first time, that format made the process accessible to the public. This was intended as a “pledge for transparency from ICSID in response, one might presume, to the increasing public criticism against international free-trade agreements such as the TTIP and CETA.
In “5.752.414.468” I am using excerpts from the hearing‘s opening and closing arguments, which I handed over as a script to a casting office.
The casting process, as an essential, though invisible, part of the film production, allows me to deconstruct and dissect the original text in a operation room of fiction in order to get a closer view into the insides of the spoken words.
I tasked casting office Ulrike Müller in Berlin to cast the actors for the three main characters of the process (judge and lawyers).
Ulrike Müller conducted the casting together with film director Irene von Alberti at the Berlin Tempodrom. I filmed this whole process, with the audition of nine actors, which lasted several days. The casting room, selected specifically, is itself also a significant part of the staged elements, whose form is meant to echo and reflect the themes contained in the script. These recordings, combined with fragments of the original voices from the ICSID hearing constitute the three-channel video installation “5.752.414.468”. The never-ending problem of nuclear energy as well as the power relationships enshrined in international investment agreements provide the basis for the 1h55 duration chosen here for the installation. Through this duration, I am referring to the idea of the ongoing and unending, that is also found in the filmed casting process, which does not end up in the final shooting of a feature film.
The thematic spaces and their visual language are also processed through the sound composition by musician Gaudenz Badrutt.
The installation consists of three identical and synchronised screens, the sound is played through loudspeakers.

Filmed at Tempodrom Berlin.