There’s much more to origami than the simple folded crane that the expert paper folders in this film must consider to be an outdated cliché. For slightly less than an hour Vanessa Gould explores the depths of papers folding, traversing its real world application from its artistic beginnings. ‘Life itself is folded’ becomes the hypothesis whether or not Gould started out with such intentions. The budding leaves of a tree, even DNA itself can be recreated with squares of paper.
Unless one partakes in the origami world, it is unlikely that they realize the old and new school mindsets exist even here. The old folders have crafted their art for years, learning from one another and mainly from experience. The younger generation is computer savvy and uses the underlying algorithms to aid in complicated constructions. Their obsession is with complexity; the more folds the better. And they are impressive indeed, two foot long dragons with a thousand scales, life like human figures, and of course animals. One old folder’s interest can be found at the other end of the spectrum; simplicity. He creates abstract designs with only a fold or two and is not concerned with the realism of the object. How can a paper elephant even be realistic?
We meet a folder whose hour-long creations produce movement; spinning like a top or popping in and out. Manipulation of a 2-D plane allows it to exist in two additional dimensions. We also meet a genius. A boy with ponytail and glasses, taught and trained by his father with ponytail and glasses, who together solved an old problem; which shapes can be made by folding a paper and then making one single straight cut? The answer: all of them. But the boy’s interest lies not in folding papers, that is a hobby, he is more interested in real world applications like the folding of an airbag that results in the most logical and flat design.
The mathematics involved in origami range from the simple to the complex, numerous professors have started using paper folding to teach. It may sound absurd that something so simple as a paper frog that hops could hold answers to bigger questions about life. But after all, folding is a unique property not inherent to all things, and as such, it can tell us much. In this documentary that demands and deserves to be twice as long, Gould explores the nature of life as materialized in the art of paper folding.
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