Midnight Zone is the latest film by artist Julian Charrière, with a soundtrack by composer and musician Laurel Halo. Charrière’s work seeks out the cultural and environmental histories hidden within natural landscapes. At Rewire 2026, Midnight Zone is screened with an accompanying live score by Halo – an artist who uses minimalism, ambient, musique concrète, and jazz approaches to meld the materiality and spirituality of sound. Following Atlas (2023), an album of swelling strings, convectional texture, and classical flourishes, she turns to Charrière's film as the next site for her otherworldly musical summonings. Midnight Zone is an underwater meditation upon the Clarion-Clipperton Zone – a remote spot in the Pacific that is threatened by deep-sea mining for its rare metals. Filmed with a lone Fresnel lighthouse lens, Charrière's film unveils the deep waters as a luminous biome of glowing creatures, shimmering fishes, and elusive predators. Halo's powerful score echoes the movement of the lens and its surrounding wildlife, creating a fluent current that swims between harmony and dissonance.