Making Eyes
Shot on Tape
•
24-May-2016
A distinctive piece of homemade filmmaking that’s awkwardly funny and intriguing. Arriving and departing on its own track, "Making Eyes" is a lo-fi film about locking eyes with a stranger on the NYC subway and falling in love. An office worker who gets by with his Mad Men impressions keeps seeing the same women on his commute to work and can’t get her out of his head. When he finally decides to introduce himself, she’s surprisingly receptive to his shifty presence and even invites him to a party (which he attends after pretending to visit “a sick friend”). Despite his uncouth manner, the party-goers aren’t entirely weirded out by him, and the woman seems to actually like him. But something changes on his way to the bathroom after a roommate encounter, which sets him off in a new direction. Directed by Sean Dunn, previously a co-director on "The Confabulators" (NoBudge Selection 2013), "Making Eyes" achieves similar strangeness and unease, but the modern HD of the previous film is replaced with the dated aesthetic of 90’s home videos via hi8 camcorder. Dunn leans heavily into awkwardness and absurdity and makes it his own. -KA
Up Next in Shot on Tape
-
The Valley of the Cats
Two brothers steal a car in Lisbon, Portugal and head for a lighthouse. Directed by George Daniell, “The Valley of the Cats,” is an inventive lo-fi comedy adventure, shot on 8mm tape, part road movie, part descent into madness. Dead Eye and Square Hands, as the brothers are known, make their way ...
-
Returning, Again
After distancing herself from a complicated relationship with her father, 22-year-old Kate Young returns home for the Thanksgiving holiday. “Returning, Again,” directed by Jinho Myung, is a family portrait shot on Mini-DV that details a persistent family divide, doing so with an astute sense of p...
-
There Is A River
Four music videos flow together in this dreamy and entrancing short film directed by Adinah Dancyger and Kaya Wilkins. “There is A River” includes tracks from the indie pop musician Okay Kaya’s second album, “Watch This Liquid Pour Itself,” to create an experimental work of beautifully captured m...