在这部L'Immeuble Des Braves纪录片/短片片中,“In Sofia, the residents of a mythical building had been evicted. I had come to hunt for film locations.” After this brief introductory title card, we discover what makes this Bulgarian building mythical, why its residents were evicted and how location-hunting turned into a film, as Bojina Panayotova seems to have experienced it: like a sudden burst of enthusiasm that tips reality into the action-packed irreality of a paranoid thriller. It only needs a phone call to a man met beforehand: “busy saving the world in his own way” by gathering snails off the railings of a subway entrance, he appears three minutes later in front of a building throwing bits of sausage through the windows of the condemned building, calling out the names of a cat and two dogs seemingly imprisoned inside the run-down dwelling. But soon the building’s caretaker drives up, forbids entry, bans the camera, and threatens to beat up Ivan. Panayotova follows Ivan’s distraught wanderings around the district, as he insults neighbours at their window, tradespeople in their shops or bus drivers at the wheel. What has become of the dogs? Those “dear communists”, the Eco-Balance dog kennels, some Arab mafia or other, or “boundless Bulgarian savagery” are the potential suspects in this outlandish documentary, which launches into a spiral whose digressive workings create similarities with some of the finest fiction films.
Sofia, 13 June 2014. As every day, Ivan returns to the building from which he was evicted. He comes to feed his children, Gigi and Sara, two stray dogs who still live there. But that morning, the dogs have disappeared. Ivan embarks on a desperate quest through the Bulgarian capital to find the dogs.