skip to main
|
skip to sidebar
cinephile
Movie reviews, essays, and critiques.
Tuesday, February 3, 2009
Mini-Review/Discovery: "Signs" (short)
I don't know what this is exactly or how it came about, but it proves that silent cinema is not dead. Yes, there are sound effects and some incidental dialogue, but what tell the story are the visuals. Everything we need to know is
shown
to us. We know exactly who this guy is as soon as we see him.
Another thing that makes the film so great is that it could take place in just about any city in the world. The story and themes are universal.
Though evidently filmed very recently, "Signs" recalls the earliest days of cinema. It is a Chaplinesque tale of trying to find happiness in the big, bad world. Our morose hero is like The Tramp squeezed into a cubical.
I must admit that, upon initial viewing, I was half convinced that this beautiful little short would turn out to only be an elaborate commercial. I suppose this is just residue from watching expensively produced Super Bowl ads this past weekend, but I was afraid that someone was going to crack open a Pepsi and smile at this camera.
Upon further consideration, I come to the realization that the only place in mainstream entertainment where essentially silent cinema persists is television advertising. It's kind of sad. I wonder now if there could be a resurgence of silent movies. Commercials, along with music videos I suppose, have acclimated a new generation to wordless, visual story telling.
I am going to track down the makers of this picture and return with more info.
1 comment:
Anonymous said...
I loved that! A little gem.
February 24, 2009 at 2:28 PM
Post a Comment
Newer Post
Older Post
Home
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
danhowes
I am a filmmaker and a writer.
View my complete profile
My films on Vimeo
Tweets
Popular Articles
Attack of the Manic Pixie Dream Girl
A new film archetype has popped up in recent years - the Manic Pixie Dream Girl. She is always a spontaneous, wacky, beautiful young woman....
Review:
Watchmen
From a filmic standpoint, Watchmen (2009) does not remind this reviewer of anything. Director Zack Snyder, just three films into his car...
Beyond the Black Maria: "Little Nemo"
"Little Nemo", 1911. (public domain) 18. "Little Nemo" (1911) Watch One trend in the brief history of cinema is...
Movie Review:
Splice
David Cronenberg would be quite amused. Director Vinzenzo Natali's Splice is thick with body-horror, just enough thought to stimulate sc...
Review:
Black Swan
Darren Aronofsky's Black Swan is a suspenseful masterpiece of body horror and paranoia set in the rigorous world of the New York Balle...
Review:
In Time
If you like to watch beautiful people run, this movie is for you. Sometimes, a film's only job can be to convey a compelling set of i...
Review: "Deja Vu"
"Deja Vu" (2006) is the third collaboration between leading man Denzel Washington and director Tony Scott (bother of Ridley). Was...
Humpday
and the value of mumblecore
Perhaps I'm biased because it is a product of Seattle, but Lynn Shelton's most recent film, Humpday, is the best example I have see...
Insomnia
: Increasingly Fictionalized
Part 3 in a series of essays on the films of director Christopher Nolan. Insomnia, Nolan's first post- Momento film, is full of m...
Review:
The Headless Woman
Lucrecia Martel’s The Headless Woman is the best head-injury film since Christopher Nolan’s Memento . Through a breathtakingly remarkable...
Blog Archive
►
2013
(15)
►
March
(1)
►
February
(3)
►
January
(11)
►
2012
(3)
►
December
(3)
►
2011
(10)
►
December
(1)
►
October
(4)
►
June
(2)
►
May
(3)
►
2010
(35)
►
December
(2)
►
November
(4)
►
October
(6)
►
September
(4)
►
August
(4)
►
July
(8)
►
June
(2)
►
April
(1)
►
February
(3)
►
January
(1)
▼
2009
(43)
►
December
(5)
►
October
(2)
►
September
(3)
►
August
(2)
►
June
(1)
►
May
(5)
►
April
(4)
►
March
(7)
▼
February
(6)
Review: "This is England"
Review: "Frozen River"
Review: "Killer of Sheep"
Review: Irreversible
Review: "Deja Vu"
Mini-Review/Discovery: "Signs" (short)
►
January
(8)
►
2008
(3)
►
December
(3)
Share
Followers
1 comment:
I loved that! A little gem.
Post a Comment