Tan Mo is a Chinese filmmaker and writer based in Warsaw. A graduate of the Łódź Film School’s Film and Television Direction Department (2018), she works across documentary and fiction. Combining intimate observation with philosophical reflection, her films explore cultural displacement, human dilemmas, and the tension between primal instinct and the structures of civilisation.
Confessions of a Mole
Confessions of a Mole
Confessions of a Mole
After seven years in Poland, the filmmaker returns to China for Lunar New Year and is drawn back into family tensions. When her parents urge her to remove a ‘misfortunate’ mole, illness and tradition collide. Blending documentary intimacy with stop-motion animation and tragicomic tones, the film explores fate, generational trauma, and the rediscovery of love. Tan Mo: ‘This film grows out of observations of intimate relationships, family dynamics, and generational tensions, exploring whether, in a fractured world, we can still find the possibility of dialogue and coexistence within the smallest social unit — the family. We often turn our own traumas into distance, and the act of filming became a way for me to revisit and mend these fractures.
Formally, the film blends the approaches of a caméra-stylo and a cinematic essay, using voiceover to reveal the inner world, stop-motion animation to express fantasies and fears, and an observational lens to capture genuine emotions and subtle interactions. As both director and cinematographer, I am simultaneously the observer and the observed; the camera becomes both witness and blade, exposing vulnerability and contradiction. This is a self-portrait film, an inquiry into where I come from, where I stand, and where I am going.’

