Born in Denver, Colorado, in 1969, Travis Wilkerson is an American writer, director and producer. With his wife, Erin Wilkerson, he founded the political art collective Creative Agitation. His films, made with modest means, move between documentary, fiction and activism. Nuclear Family screened in the 2022 Berlinale Forum. Sight & Sound once described him as 'the political conscience of American cinema'.
Through the Graves the Wind Is Blowing
Through the Graves the Wind Is Blowing
Through the Graves the Wind Is Blowing
In present-day Split, detective Ivan Peric dodges a career in tourism only to chase the deaths it leaves behind. Assigned to a string of unwanted tourist murders, he encounters indifference, obstruction and public scorn. His futile investigation mirrors a society still marked by post-Yugoslav disillusion, where bureaucracy buries facts and justice ranks below resentment.
Travis Wilkerson: '[On rejecting archival images in this film in favour of colour manipulation and digital effects, including an animated Croatian fascist flag,] I'm always wrestling with the question of what can and cannot be represented. Fascism is deeply overdetermined, in the sense of being associated with a specific set of iconographic imagery. I wanted to figure out a way to disrupt the monochromatic image that's predominant. So, for the 90s footage, I pumped up the colour saturation. That footage was already colourful, but I amplified it slightly. I was drawn to the idea that normally, older images would be in black-and-white and newer ones would be in colour, and I wanted to invert that. I asked myself what I could do to describe the Croatian fascists. Every time I looked at the Croatian flag, I wondered what would happen if I tried to [animate] it somehow. It became a way to make something present now.’
— Excerpted from Ela Bittencourt, 'Interview: Travis Wilkerson on Through the Graves the Wind Is Blowing', Film Comment, 17 June 2024.

