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Director's Statement
SWEET DREAMS is set in a fictional microcosm, a place that resembles a remote sugar plantation in the Dutch East Indies around 1900. The Dutch colonists are in power in this cosmos, but power is shifting. After the sudden death of the patriarch and sugar factory owner, a game of cat and mouse begins, where everyone’s position in the pecking order is at stake.
The story of the film can be called a horrific fairy tale. While I never made the atrocities in the story bigger than the atrocities I encountered while researching the situation then and there, I did choose to approach these atrocities through an absurdist and alienating lens. SWEET DREAMS is a film that emphasizes the banality of evil. It is not a conventional period film, but a stylized satire, one that presents reality as a magical, at times surrealist fiction. In this way I wanted to build a bridge to the present, to make a mirror in which we can recognize our current world.
This is a film in which an ensemble of characters is central, who all have an archetypal function in the story. With SWEET DREAMS I wanted to focus not only on the victims of colonialism, but on all different positions in this system. And thereby not falling into the trap of a victimizing gaze or too simplistic good guy- bad guy oppositions. It was precisely to illuminate the complexity of colonial dynamics that were the goals during the making of this film.