Minot, North Dakota

Minot, North Dakota

Synopsis

"A monotonous landscape unrolls before the stranger's eyes. Uniform single-family houses line up next to depressing trailer parks, extending into brown plains. The camera rarely comes to rest, as no one would want to stay here longer than necessary. In long tracking shots it glides through the empty streets of Minot, North Dakota, a small town in America's no man's land. From off screen a young person explains emotionlessly that everybody there is for the war while the camera lingers briefly to show a sign with the inscription Support Our Troops. Then a man's voice can be heard talking about the speaker's job for the Air Force. If the US president gave the order, he would launch the nuclear missiles, he states and laughs. In fact, it sounds almost amusing when he describes himself as a babysitter of 150 such missiles that were stationed in underground silos around Minot during the Cold War, and are still waiting in readiness.

The documentary film Minot, North Dakota, by filmmakers Angelika Brudniak and Cynthia Madansky, is about a life lived directly over a depot of nuclear weapons which is stuck in the Cold War. The local residents' voices – teenagers, housewives, employees of the Air Force – tell us about a daily life characterized by paranoia, surveillance cameras, racism and false alarms, while the camera continues its forays, merely taking in what there is to see. Like a mushroom cloud over the plain, Zeena Parkins' ambient sound hovers above it all.

At first she was glad to have moved there, says a young girl, but now she wants to live somewhere else. In the last shot in Minot, North Dakota we see a small bus with McHenry Express stenciled on the side race from the picture. Anything to get away from here." – Alexandra Seibel (Translation: Steve Wilder)