
VIEWER'S NOTE: This film is only viewable on the distributor's website. Please read through these instructions and save the invitation code.
- When you are ready to watch, Click 'Watch now.'
- You will be brought to a black screen, at the bottom it will read "Try viewing it at the original source." Click on those words.
- Your browser will be redirected to the film's distributor site. You will need to register and create an account.
- To complete your registration, you will be asked to supply an invitation code: TAO-PEFF.
- Watch the film!
In a universe that erases its tracks, why are we so hellbent on leaving a trace?
From executive producer Werner Herzog (“Cave of Forgotten Dreams”; “Grizzly Man”) and director Ian Cheney (“King Corn”), “The Arc of Oblivion” is an unexpectedly playful search for an answer to a deeply existential question. Set against the backdrop of the filmmaker’s quixotic quest to build an ark in a field in Maine, the film heads far afield — to salt mines in the Alps, fjords in the Arctic, and ancient libraries in the Sahara — to illuminate the strange world of archives, record-keeping, and memory.
VIEWER'S NOTE: This film is only viewable on the distributor's website. Please read through these instructions and save the invitation code.
- When you are ready to watch, Click 'Watch now.'
- You will be brought to a black screen, at the bottom it will read "Try viewing it at the original source." Click on those words.
- Your browser will be redirected to the film's distributor site. You will need to register and create an account.
- To complete your registration, you will be asked to supply an invitation code: TAO-PEFF.
- Watch the film!
In a universe that erases its tracks, why are we so hellbent on leaving a trace?
From executive producer Werner Herzog (“Cave of Forgotten Dreams”; “Grizzly Man”) and director Ian Cheney (“King Corn”), “The Arc of Oblivion” is an unexpectedly playful search for an answer to a deeply existential question. Set against the backdrop of the filmmaker’s quixotic quest to build an ark in a field in Maine, the film heads far afield — to salt mines in the Alps, fjords in the Arctic, and ancient libraries in the Sahara — to illuminate the strange world of archives, record-keeping, and memory.