• 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

Divine Air: Invisible Forces and the Inescapable Walls they Erect

Indie Shorts Mag Team by Indie Shorts Mag Team
28 Apr 2023
in Reviews
0
Divine Air - Short Film Review - Indie Shorts Mag

Josh Pafchek’s 8-minute Divine Air dives into a surreal mode to chronicle the experience of a couple trying to get medical treatment for their sick child. The system is unhelpful and at times downright predatory. Faced with these constraints, the film creates a feeling of walls closing in—a maze so tight no car or plane could escape it.   

Tagged as a mystery, the film shifts fluidly between narrative voices to create a mosaic of experiences of the same event. It begins with Russell’s, as he rushes to get to a doctor after his insurance and his plea for an appointment have both been rejected. When he does get himself inside a consulting room, the image is an unsettling one. Set to whimsical, comedic music, he and Junior are lowered into chairs as if controlled by invisible strings.  

Divine Air - Short Film Review - Indie Shorts Mag

One does not know the severity of Junior’s (Kor Wren) illness; the doctor (Albert Minero Jr.) offhandedly diagnoses it as the common cold. The same doctor also uses the opportunity to leverage a date with Junior’s father, Russell (Pafchek) while his mother, Alicia (Gabriela Lopez) is seated just beside him. Administrative apathy combines with predation, creating a sense of claustrophobia. Theatrical lighting (and the presence of an actual audience) reinforces it. 

While the narrative is jagged, the pace is unrelenting. Past and present blend into one another through Alicia and Russell, while Junior’s distraught call to wake up is heard in voiceover. In the present, the couple never speaks to each other. On-screen, neither does Junior. The vacuum created by the lack of onscreen relationships is filled up with confusion, dread and a continuous movement forward. Whether it gets anywhere is another question entirely.

Divine Air - Short Film Review - Indie Shorts Mag

A feeling of absent autonomy then haunts Divine Air. The desperate couple are constantly in a mode of action and yet it has no impact. Like a maze, their apparent progress and activity are besieged with futility. They move according to the design of an unseen force. Is the question who the master is, or how to find the exit? Neither the audience nor the characters know the right questions yet. 

Watch Divine Air Short Film Trailer

Divine Air: Invisible Forces and the Inescapable Walls they Erect
  • Direction
  • Cinematography
  • Screenplay
  • Editing
  • Music
4
Tags: PrivateReviewShort Film ReviewsSurrealismSurrealistSurrealist Short Film Review
Previous Post

Steps to How to Effectively Write a Film Review

Next Post

Remembering Baba: An Ode To One’s Father

Indie Shorts Mag Team

Indie Shorts Mag Team

Related Posts

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
A Good Day Will Come - Short Film Review - Indie Shorts Mag
Reviews

A Good Day Will Come: Relentless Optimism in the Face of the Tyrannical State

2nd October 2024
Next Post
Remembering Baba (2022) - Documentary Review - Indie Shorts Mag

Remembering Baba: An Ode To One’s Father

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

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


Sponsored

Advertise Here

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: 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
  • #ShortFilmTrailer: Grace: Examining A Loss Of Faith. 

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

#ShortFilm #ShortFilmReview #SupportindieFilm #Trailer #FilmTrailer #ShortFilms
  • 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.