
Directed by Cecelia Condit
Possibly in Michigan’ is an analog musical fairy tale about cannibalism in Middle America. A masked man follows two women home. There the victims become the aggressors.
Writer(s): Cecelia Condit
Producer(s): Cecelia Condit
Duration: 12 minutes
Genres: Horror
Country: United States
Language: English
Aspect Ratio: 4:3





| Cecelia Condit Since 1981, Condit’s videos have created heroines whose lives swing between beauty and the grotesque, innocence and cruelty, youth and fragility. Her work puts a subversive spin on the traditional mythology of women in film and the psychology of sexuality and violence. Exploring the dark side of female subjectivity, her “feminist fairy tales” focus on friendships, age, and the natural world. She has shown internationally in festivals, museums and alternative spaces, and is represented in collections including the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota, the Museum of Modern Art in NYC and the Centre Georges Pompidou Musee National d’Art Moderne, Paris, France. She received the 2024 Stan Brakhage Vision Award for expanded the boundaries of personal cinema. She has received awards at film festivals, and from grants from the Guggenheim Foundation, American Film Institute, National Endowment for the Arts, and the Mary L. Nohl Foundation. She’s a professor emerita in the Department of Film, Video, Animation & New Genres at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, where she was the director of the graduate program in film for 30-years. She moved to MN two years ago. |
