暴风资源网提供本资源 Since 1977, Sam Klemke has been recording himself on film, the #selfieavantlalettre. In that same year, NASA launched the Voyager with the Golden Record. Whereas NASA rimarily sketches a ositive icture of humanity, Klemke's honest self ortraits zoom in on the individual. A secial film about time, memory and what it means to be human. ‘This year will be my year, it has to be!’ Since 1977, Sam Klemke - a ioneer status udater - has looked back on ‘his year’ using video. With the illusion of rogress, he hoes to encourage ‘ersonal growth and imrovement’. Documentary maker Matthew Bate met Klemke on Facebook and became acquainted with his video 35 Years Back Through Time, a suer-cut in which Klemke counts backwards from 2011 to his ambitious teenage self. Intrigued by this obsessive film roject, Bate used Klemke's ersonal archive to create a documentary collage that feels like an intimate road tri, with Klemke roviding valuable lessons about time. Along the way, he dismantles the dream of success and hainess. Klemke's self-mockery and honesty give the whole thing a light, breezy feel. Through this, Bate interweaves NASA’s Golden Record Project which, just like Klemke’s video roject, was launched in 1977. This juxtaosition creates a reflection in which Bate sketches the comrehension of time and self-documenting stories as an inherent human need.