Showing posts with label film. Show all posts
Showing posts with label film. Show all posts

Friday, May 22, 2026

Hamnet and the Sorrow of Loss

Personal reflections after a film…

Jessie: Losing a son at thirteen… it’s a devastation that never fully settles. Watching Agnes lose Hamnet felt like watching myself from a distance.
Paul: For me it was similar. My son is still alive—forty‑five now—but the boy he was disappeared when he was fifteen. The schizophrenia‑like symptoms took him somewhere I can’t follow.
Jessie: You’ve said before it feels like living with a ghost.
Paul: Thirty years of it. A ghost of a son who once laughed, once argued, once dreamed. The film stirred that ache again, the ache of losing someone who still breathes.
Jessie: That’s a particular kind of sorrow. People don’t always understand that kind of loss.
Paul: They think grief requires a funeral. But grief can be a long corridor with no door at the end. But Shakespeare, his way was to write through it. That struck me. I’ve spent years trying to make sense of my son’s disappearance into illness, trying to understand something from it.
Jessie: The film seemed to suggest a way to hold sorrow without being crushed by it.
Paul: Yes. The ending especially. The way grief became a kind of offering, a way to honour the child rather than drown in the loss.
Jessie: I found myself thinking: maybe devastation can be rearranged. Not erased, but rearranged into something that lets us keep walking.
Paul: That’s what I felt too. That my son’s ghost doesn’t have to haunt me; he can accompany me. Not as absence, but as a presence transformed.
Jessie: And that love doesn’t vanish with the child. It just changes its shape, like water flowing.
Paul: Shakespeare said, “Give sorrow words.”
Jessie: And, “The rest is silence.”  Knowing that silence, too, can be a kind of healing.
_________
Voice-over
Overtones of Ophelia. Her drowning, being pulled under by loss, was perhaps a metaphor for Hamnet succumbing to a fever. And the film adding themes of parental grief, absence, and giving sorrow shape through art.

Wednesday, October 23, 2019

An inadvertent let-slip...


Not knowing who Itakura is, Gondo tells her about his filing system …
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Gondo: Being retired is not simple.
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Itakura: How so? Nothing to do, perhaps?
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Gondo: Plenty. There’s the paperwork. It fills up the mailbox.
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Itakura: Junk mail mostly though?
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Gondo: You have to be careful. Some you can toss, yes. But if you don’t respond to some letters you could be out of pocket. Like miss a credit card payment and get charged penalty rates. Or find your health insurance has suddenly lapsed. Or the vehicle is unregistered. Or the tax office is coming after you.
Maybe I can help you...
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Itakura: Be organized then.
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Gondo: I am. I’ve now got a filing system with forty folders.
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Itakura: Forty? That’s a lot.
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Gondo: And in each one there are multiple subfolders.
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Itakura: Maybe I can help you. Show me your files.
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Voice-over
A lot of categories and subcategories. For example, the city office payments file: pension, national tax, local tax, aged tax, vehicle tax, national health insurance. Inspector Itakura will likely look there first. Alternative Itami Juzo plot twist.
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Wednesday, November 15, 2017

French film: Lumière!

A paean to the genius of the Lumières…
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Marguerite: A collection of 108 remastered 50 second-films.
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Auguste and Louis
Jeanne: They were inventors and directors, not just inventors, like Edison. He shut the moving pictures in a box, in his kinetoscope. The Lumières showed the moving pictures using their cinematograph, so many people could see at once.
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Marguerite: The cinema was born.
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Jeanne: Edison’s invention was like seeing pictures on a smartphone. The Lumières created cinema. A distinction that exists today.
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A star is born...
Marguerite: They formed a, what you say, a disciplage of directors who went out and shot exotic places and activities. Collaborative power.
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Jeanne: And their actualités are really the first documentaries. Apt naming too. Their name means “light”.
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Marguerite: And what a body of work they left. Produced 1500 films between 1895 and 1905, then just quit. Went on to other things.
_________
Voice-over

Brothers, Auguste and Louis Lumière, inventors, producers, directors. In a sense, they founded the movie business. Kudos to Director Thierry Frémaux for his 4K montage of 108 films: Lumière!
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Monday, November 13, 2017

Indian film: Bioscopewala

A film about cinema...
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Addie Quested: Right up there with Cinema Paradiso and Good morning Babilonia. Is the genre Bollywood?
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Fruit selling to film showing
Anne Sari: Bollywood is often about drama, music, dance, romance. It doesn’t have much of that. But Hindi cinema contains epic references, family stories and stories within stories. So there’s an element of Bollywood.
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Addie Quested: What prompted the format?
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Anne Sari: Actually it was the story of Kabuliwala, by Rabindranath Tagore that formed the structure.
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Addie Quested: A dried-fruit seller from Kabul. An old story,1892.
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Anne Sari: Yes. We called the girl Mini too, but made put into a modern context. In the 1990s, the bioscopewala, an Afghan itinerant, who showed cinema in the streets, befriended Mini because she reminded him of his daughter. Her father, a photographer, also befriended him. Jump forward twenty years, Mini’s father died on his way to Kabul, the bioscopewala has been in prison and lost his mind, so Mini sets out on a pilgrimage to put the pieces together.
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Voice-over

Bioscopewala: a bioscope is a simple cinema, a wala is one who runs a bioscope. Echoes of literature, twists in the plot, the characters struggle and develop. Good one!
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Sunday, September 17, 2017

Storyboarding on Whiteboard and PowerPoint

A documentary film director explains story generation…
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Intern: How do you draft your story?
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tabula rasa beginning
Documentarian: Two ways: first I scribble the plan on a big white board using words and arrows in different colors.
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Intern: Brainstorming?
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Documentarian: Stream of consciousness more like. I like to stand, walk around, I like the space of the white board to write on. A strong coffee, like Nespresso’s Kazaar, helps.
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Intern: It’s then refined?
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Documentarian: Here’s where I go from to analog to digital. When I’ve got the flow, I open PowerPoint and start pulling in pictures. One slide, one picture. Photos, sketches, diagrams.
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Intern: No words?
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Documentarian: The narrative goes in the comments window at the bottom of each slide.
___________
Voice-over

A visual conceptualizer evidently. The process has merit. A PowerPoint plan can be saved as a movie to be played as a pitch for the project. It could even be used to base the film trailer on.
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