Byron Conrad Erwin
Undershadow
1st Feb 2012Posted in: Byron Conrad Erwin 0
Undershadow

Undershadow is like a documentary, giving the audience a unique perspective on our familiar world, but it is filmed like a Hollywood film. Expertly framed shots and flawless camera compositions make in visually stimulating.
It is a very slow moving film, but it manages to keep your attention because, in many cases, it is just so interesting to see things in the way they are shown.
The experience that is far greater than, as they say, the sum of its parts. The shots contain images of our normal day-to-day world, and the end result is absolutely hypnotic.
This is a wonderful cinematic experience, and my favorite thing about this kind of film is that they can be shown in any country in the world and not have to worry about subtitles or even altered meanings.

 

Neither narrative fiction nor documentary, Undershadow is a wordless montage of images photographed around Atlanta Georgia. Played to stirring music and edited into a sublime piece of visual poetry. If you are looking for meaning, you may have to dig pretty deep. The artistic accomplishment of this film is simply dazzling.

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