• Indie Short Mag TV
Indie Shorts Mag
  • Home
  • Interviews
  • News
    • Film Festival News
    • Short Film News
  • Reviews
    • Short Film
    • Documentary
    • Web Series
  • Hall of Fame
  • Short Film Festival – 2025Accepting Films
  • Tutorials
    • Pre-Production
    • Post-Production
  • Submit Short Film
    • Submit Short Film for Review
    • Submit Web Series for Review
    • Interview Submission Form
No Result
View All Result
Indie Shorts Mag
  • Home
  • Interviews
  • News
    • Film Festival News
    • Short Film News
  • Reviews
    • Short Film
    • Documentary
    • Web Series
  • Hall of Fame
  • Short Film Festival – 2025Accepting Films
  • Tutorials
    • Pre-Production
    • Post-Production
  • Submit Short Film
    • Submit Short Film for Review
    • Submit Web Series for Review
    • Interview Submission Form
No Result
View All Result
Indie Shorts Mag
No Result
View All Result

The Mole: Questioning The Double Standards Of The Society

Indie Shorts Mag Team by Indie Shorts Mag Team
14 Mar 2021
in Reviews
0
The Mole - Short Film Review - Indie Shorts Mag

This is not an educational or philosophical film. It does not give answers. Instead, what director-writer Ambrose Smoke’s 19-minute short does is raise pertinent questions. Questions that should be asked more often. Questions that could potentially bring about a conscientious change into fulfilling our destiny as human beings.

What’s the most defining aspect of human life, one might ask? How far is one willing to go to be accepted by their times and contemporaries? The Mole is a corporate drama that centres on Angie (Lauren Engels), an unapologetically ambitious woman whose landmark career moves and gains have only earned her envy, if not outright hostility from her colleagues. As if apologising for one’s ambition (often addressed as greed), especially if that individual is a woman, were not enough, Angie has something, in addition, to apologise for: a face. One with an appalling abnormality. 

The Mole - Short Film Review - Indie Shorts Mag

Before you think of a mole as too insignificant to be noticed, imagine it to be bigger than the mass of your nose and be visible. Now that it has caught your attention, imagine living with it, or having to simply look at it, daily, either as the bearer of it or as someone who knows her.

Smoke takes good care to present Angie, a fact that is noted right with the opening scene, so that we remain prepared; and yet are caught off-guard. The credit to this should go to the cinematography. Benjamin Reynoso’s eyes pick on her nervous clasps, the HR manager’s (Iván Gordillo) slamming of the desk, all routine-like, regular and perfectly believable to have happened. Well-angled and thought-out shots like these help maintain the pulsating moments of the film. 

As Angie goes up the corporate ladder, her friend Becca (Benita Katende) becomes her conscience. The dialogues are very well written, especially when these two are involved. As they go back and forth discussing and challenging one another with their polar opposite perspectives, it is interesting to see female characters play both the ally and the contrarian. But Angie’s corporate success, even if it comes with an understanding boss (Jonathon Sawdon) is not eschewed from office gossip and snarky remarks. Try hard as she may, her identity is reduced to a congenital defect, simply because it is visible to all. Would men have to face repercussions on the same scale? Society is unbiased in its harshness, if not in gender equality.

The Mole - Short Film Review - Indie Shorts Mag

Her boss gives her the platform to outshine herself, a rare opportunity before the conglomerate, Mr Katanga (Clovis Kasanda), and now as she is inches away from the dream, she is bitterly reminded of the price it bears. Music is sparingly used in The Mole, making most scenes hard-hitting. While the editing tows the film into a rushed pace, it works, as we see the quick rise in Angie’s career and her seemingly perfect life. Becca and Angie share an easy, familiar chemistry, something that reflects on Katende and Engels’s acting prowess, but it is Sawdon who owns his character like the back of his hand. And effectively it is through him that we see the dichotomy of the society that on one hand preaches to be inclusive and accepting, while also being responsible for its binding conventions.

The Mole is an important short that picks apart the beliefs that have been fed into society’s collective psyche for so long. By presenting the story of a woman and the devastating measures the world compels or rather corners her into taking, in order to simply survive, should stand as a reminder of how far (or back) we, as a society, have come in time.

Watch The Mole Short Film

The Mole: Questioning The Double Standards Of The Society
  • Direction
  • Cinematography
  • Screenplay
  • Editing
  • Music
3.3
Tags: DramaDrama Short Film ReviewReviewShort Film Reviews
Previous Post

Where’s Kate?: Whodunit Hidden Under Hilarious Comedy

Next Post

The Lennox Report: Love In The Time Of Covid-19

Indie Shorts Mag Team

Indie Shorts Mag Team

Related Posts

The Last Fool - Short Film Review - Indie Shorts Mag
Reviews

The Last Fool: Crime Drama of an Extremist High on Irony, and a Priest Who Had to Foot the Bill

7th October 2024
Viaticum - Short Film Review - Indie Shorts Mag
Reviews

Viaticum: A Comedy on the Things We Take (Down) With Us on the Way Out

5th October 2024
Next Post
The Lennox Report - Short Film Review - Indie Shorts Mag

The Lennox Report: Love In The Time Of Covid-19

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


Sponsored

Featured Post

Announcing Short Of The Year Awards 2023

Announcing Short Of The Year Awards 2023

Latest Podcast

  • Recent Reviews

About Indie Shorts Mag

Indie Shorts Mag is a publishing agency that works within the ‘short film circuit’. We review short films, documentaries, music videos and web series, amongst others. We stand out amongst the short film review sites for being multi-diverse & global in our platform and reach.
Our team works tirelessly to help promote, publicize and market your short films that deserve the shout-out! Besides reviews, we host film festival news as it’s a known fact that the film festival buzz is unmissable and we ensure you aren’t left behind!
We aspire to form a niche for ourselves as the ‘short film magazine’ that remains the hub for filmmakers & their audience.

Popular Topics

  • Announcements
  • Articles
  • Crowdfunding
  • Editorial
  • Film Festival News
  • Film Festivals
  • India Edition
  • Interviews
  • Marketing
  • Marketing
  • News
  • Online Premiere
  • Post-Production
  • Pre-Production
  • Reviews
  • Short Film
  • Short Film Competition
  • Short Film News
  • Tutorials
  • Web Series

Indie Shorts Mag on Instagram

Follow Us On Instagram

  • #ShortFilmReview: The Last Fool: Super philosophies of the new and manifold worse Will Huntings.

Read our review and watch the short film. Link in bio.

#ShortFilm #Review #IndieFilmReview #FilmReview #SupportIndieFilm
  • #ShortFilmReview: Viaticum: God probably understands, he’s an understanding sort.

Read our review. Link in bio.

#ShortFilm #Review #IndieFilmReview #FilmReview #SupportIndieFilm
  • #ShortFilmReview: A Good Day Will Come: Horrors are nurtured with silence.

Read our review. Link in bio.

#ShortFilm #Review #IndieFilmReview #FilmReview #SupportIndieFilm
  • #ShortFilmTrailer: Our Home Here: Paying The Cost Of Having A Dream. 

Read our review & watch the short, link in bio. 

#ShortFilm #ShortFilmReview #SupportindieFilm #Trailer #FilmTrailer  #shortfilms
  • #ShortFilmReview: Enough for you: Love and fear amidst the march of time.

Read our review. Link in bio.

#ShortFilm #Review #IndieFilmReview #FilmReview #SupportIndieFilm
  • #ShortFilmTrailer: Reparations: On Empathy And The Legitimacy Of Being. 

Read our review & watch the short, link in bio.

#ShortFilm #ShortFilmReview #SupportindieFilm #Trailer #FilmTrailer #ShortFilms
  • #ShortFilmTrailer: How I’ve Met God: A Coming Into Form. 

Read our review & watch the short, link in bio. 

#ShortFilm #ShortFilmReview #SupportindieFilm #Trailer #FilmTrailer #ShortFilms
  • #ShortFilmReview: Lemon: Nobody is getting away.

Read our review. Link in bio.

#ShortFilm #Review #IndieFilmReview #FilmReview #SupportIndieFilm
  • #ShortFilmReview: Kotsuage: Grains of rice and drops of blood change little children forever.

Read our review. Link in bio.

#ShortFilm #Review #IndieFilmReview #FilmReview #SupportIndieFilm
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Advertise With Us
  • Contact Us
  • Submit Article
  • Write for Us
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy

© 2015-2024 Indie Shorts Mag.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Interviews
  • News
    • Film Festival News
    • Short Film News
  • Reviews
    • Short Film
    • Documentary
    • Web Series
  • Hall of Fame
  • Short Film Festival – 2025
  • Tutorials
    • Pre-Production
    • Post-Production
  • Submit Short Film
    • Submit Short Film for Review
    • Submit Web Series for Review
    • Interview Submission Form

© 2015-2024 Indie Shorts Mag.