The film opens to Mother Teresa’s quote that goes in the lines of loving someone or something until there’s only love left and no place for hurt. Poetic. Philosophical. But, seldom tried. Humans aren’t designed to live in abandon. Societies ensure we don’t. But, in Brendan Sweeney’s Impossibility:Possibility, we see a glimpse of that spiral… Continue reading Impossibility:Possibility: A Paradox Of Modern Life Solutions To Age-old Problems
Tag: Short Film Reviews
Guilty Until Proven Innocent: The Lethal Consequences Of Presuming Guilt
Police violence against people of colour. Edward Goree’s Guilty Until Proven Innocent says it all in its title. That black people, people of colour, are treated with a different set of standards by far too many institutions– the police one of the primary ones; one you might have to face at any point in the… Continue reading Guilty Until Proven Innocent: The Lethal Consequences Of Presuming Guilt
Hillie Boliday-The Voice Of A Jazzeration: Satirizing The Legend Of Celebrity
The giant personalities of pop stars and musicians in general play a large role in the establishment of their celebrity. Films that have in the past dealt with celebrities have focused greatly on this aspect of their popularity. It’s a no-brainer then that to satirise either or both of these, the personality would inevitably find… Continue reading Hillie Boliday-The Voice Of A Jazzeration: Satirizing The Legend Of Celebrity
Our Father’s Cabin: Grief Through The Veil Of Nostalgia
Can a strained relationship be revived? Perhaps not a complete restoration of the things just as they were but a nurturing bond, painstakingly put back together, that adds meaning to life. Two half-brothers reconcile while visiting the cabin which belonged to their late father; amidst human imperfection, John Olav Stokke’s Our Father’s Cabin narrates a… Continue reading Our Father’s Cabin: Grief Through The Veil Of Nostalgia
Nightingale: A Family Torn Apart By A Tragedy
Writer-Director Edward Palmer’s Nightingale is evocative – of a sense of profound loss that cannot be expressed, but only felt. In his 9:00 minutes long film, what he does is present the lives of two individuals, parents at that, and the worst nightmare that any parents could possibly have to endure. But, with almost no… Continue reading Nightingale: A Family Torn Apart By A Tragedy
Ostinato: A Morbid Account Of Someone’s Mind
Writer Paul Deichmann’s Ostinato is a confluence of multiple genres. Is it a horror or a psychological thriller? A dark comedy or a chilling macabre? It all boils down to the viewer. But, one thing assured, in a span of 5:41 minutes, the film manages to offer something for each of its takers. Barret Coates… Continue reading Ostinato: A Morbid Account Of Someone’s Mind
Mistake: A Thriller of Errors
Written and directed by Jay Bhatti Mistake is a 7:10-minute film that recounts the tale of two robbers, Chris and Mark and their attempts to escape getting caught after a robbery goes woefully wrong. The plot of the film is woven around two robbers, Chris and Mark, played respectively by Dan Furlonger and Thomas Melhuish.… Continue reading Mistake: A Thriller of Errors
Together: Ryan Oksenberg Knows How To Use His Music
A beautifully constructed bizarre film (with its fair share of filmmaking ups and downs), Together makes a curious affair of zombies – or at least some form of zombiedom; the ones in the film are lucid and coherent. Writer-director Ryan Oksenberg’s masterstroke lies in the use of contrapuntal music in Together. He uses Panda Bear… Continue reading Together: Ryan Oksenberg Knows How To Use His Music
Just Me And You: A Father-Daughter Tale Like None Other
All she wanted was to go to the beach. As innocent as that demand might seem, it was set to change her life forever. Director Sandrine Brodeur-Desrosiers’s Just Me and You is a 21:38 minutes long film on Eva (Dalia Binzari) an 8-year old, ordinary girl doting on her father like all others her age.… Continue reading Just Me And You: A Father-Daughter Tale Like None Other
The Confirmation: A Teenager’s Dilemma, But Through The Mother’s Lens
Writer-Director Marie-Louise Damgaard’s The Confirmation is about a teenager’s transformation, but not just into adulthood, as one might imagine. Entirely shot through the prism of the mother’s lens, the story revolves around Mathias (Xean Peake), a transgender boy, both in real and reel life and his poignant journey into embracing his identity. The opening shot… Continue reading The Confirmation: A Teenager’s Dilemma, But Through The Mother’s Lens