Mirror molecules, the soul of a smartphone, and dismissive rave: more audio-visual to reveal what's beneath the surface
Our semi-regular curation of the best of the web’s AV. This week, we’re identifying fundamental patterns below the surface of things…
Above, from Aeon:
Why do the building blocks of life possess a mysterious symmetry?
‘Chirality’ refers to a property of molecules that come in two distinct varieties – a ‘right-handed’ and ‘left-handed’ form. At first glance, this concept may seem like an esoteric bit of knowledge relevant only to lab chemists. However, the fact takes on a new meaning when you consider that, while chemical reactions tend to produce a 50:50 chiral mix of these molecules, the building blocks of life come in a single (or homochiral) form – and indeed must for life as we know it to operate. That’s all to say, at the core of the origin of life is a mystery of homochirality.
This film from the science documentary series Chemistry Shorts explores how the groundbreaking experiments of two Harvard University scientists, S Furkan Ozturk and Dimitar Sasselov, may have cracked the case of how the ‘prebiotic soup’ generated homochirality – and in doing so, made life possible. Balancing the chemical nitty-gritty of it all with the larger existential questions their work probes, the film makes for a riveting dive into a potential breakthrough on one of science’s most enduring mysteries.
Director: Page Buono
Website: Chemistry Shorts
From Vimeo Staff Picks:
Hey Siri, wanna take my body for a joyride?
Created as the main title film for OFFF Barcelona 2024, ‘Synthetic Pleasures’ is a unique take on the robot uprising, imagining a world in which our digital assistants like Siri and Alexa leave the confines of their devices and take some human bodies for a joyride, just to feel something, to be human for a minute.
Writer & Director - Stuart Langfield,
Score & Sound - AEPH
From Promo News:
Luc Rëso Janin directs a psychedelic promo for Clark’s Dismissive, an experimental, hypnotising explosion of vibrant patterns and fonts overlaid onto the legendary electronic artist's face.
Through a mix of projection and post effects, the resulting visual for the track is a sensory feast, which complements Clark's avant-garde soundscapes.
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