Sunday, October 23, 2011
Please Say Something Short Film Review
Monday, October 17, 2011
D-I-M, Deus in Machina Short Film Review
Tuesday, October 11, 2011
Nuit Blanche Short Film Review
Nuit Blanche from Spy Films on Vimeo.
Wow! The phrase "visually stunning" usually makes me think of a movie packed with special effects and totally lacking in substance. When it comes time to print the packaging, such films usually get "visually stunning!" as a blurb since there's typically not much else to say about the movie.Tuesday, October 4, 2011
Old Fangs Short Film Review
Old Fangs from adrien merigeau on Vimeo.
This short animated film seems to be the story of the son of the Big Bag Wolf attempting to reconnect with his estranged father. The main character, here a young wolf, takes a couple of friends along on a trip to a house deep in the forest where his father lives. His friends express their concerns and ask him if he even knows where he's going as they venture deeper into the dark woods. The entire film is done in a rather dark and moody sort of way that underscores the bad relationship the character has with his father.
Sunday, September 25, 2011
Bottle Short Film Review
Bottle from Kirsten Lepore on Vimeo.
I'm a fan of stop animation and this film used the technique to great effect. A Sand Person and a Snow Person, living in two very different places, communicate by sending things from their environment in a bottle to drift across the sea to the other. They pass items back and forth, augmenting themselves with these items as they go. In the end, they attempt to reach one another so that they can be together and are both destroyed in the process.Sunday, September 18, 2011
Between Bears Short Film Review
Between Bears from Eran Hilleli on Vimeo.
OK so it's symbolic of man's attempt to rise up beyond his primitive nature and the inherent cyclical futility of his efforts? No, wait, I think it's about global warming. The bear at the beginning was hot so he shaved off his fur like Pedro in Napoleon Dynamite and the bear at the end is riding on the very last chunk of floating ice after the icecaps have melted. No?
Whatever the intended narrative of this film (assuming there even is one), it's sure to be secondary to graceful and strikingly original visual style and of this animated short. The oddly angular shapes and figures seem to drift around in a mostly bare and melancholy world where not much context is given. I especially enjoyed the simple parallax effect of the layers of trees panning as the butterflies drifted through the forest. It was haunting and very atmospheric.
The most human-like characters spend most of the running time of the movie trudging on and on across an ever changing landscape in chase of butterflies born from the shaved fur of the first bear. One is seen with a beard after the journey ends, suggesting that they wandered for a very long time. In the end, I was left with the same sort of somber feeling of having just seen something very serious and profound.
This was a beautiful and artfully executed short film and I thoroughly enjoyed it. Everything from the simple shapes of the onscreen elements to the subdued color pallet gives you a sense that this piece was very carefully crafted and the result is aesthetically pleasing and oddly touching at the same time. I'll be looking up more from this filmmaker.