PRODUCED BY REBEL TURBO 8 GLITCH MEDIA HOUSE
MORPHIC is an experimental feature born from Barbara Brogi’s autobiographical writing. The film follows Barbara - who becomes “Laura” her maniac alter ego - through the heightened emotional landscape of Berlin: excess, fragility, euphoria, collapse.
As the narrative fractures, an older version of herself appears, commenting on the very act of storytelling and exposing the unstable authorship behind the film. Electronic, ritualistic music drives a visual world that mutates constantly, moving from lived memory into full abstraction, until identity itself liquifies.
MORPHIC is a self portrait in constant transformation: intimate, hallucinatory and defiantly anti-narrative
In this radical special edition, Autobiographical expands beyond the page and enters the visual world of MORPHIC, Barbara Brogi’s hallucinatory feature film.
Written with brutal honesty and visionary clarity, Autobiographical traces the journey of a young woman escaping the suffocating structures of her birthplace after a bipolar diagnosis at twenty-two. Moving through Los Angeles, Paris, and finally Berlin, Barbara confronts love, addiction, techno nights, destructive excesses, and the unstable magnificence of a mind that breaks and reforms.
In Berlin’s chaotic beauty she spirals, crashes, resurrects, and transforms — a life lived at extremes, where pain becomes material and survival becomes art.
This special Morphic Edition includes 50 stills from the feature film, creating a hybrid object at the border of cinema, literature, and visual diary. Images and text collide to form a vivid, destabilizing self-portrait: a woman split open and reassembled through dream logic, memory fractures, and visionary intensity.
Written in a sharp, intimate, dreamlike voice, Autobiographical is not a confession — it’s an incision.
A book about escaping, breaking, becoming, and turning one’s own chaos into creation.
For readers interested in experimental writing, autofiction, bipolar narratives, Berlin memoirs, queer and hybrid cinema, and the violent tenderness of self-transformation.