The Neighbor’s Window

The other night I watched the 2020 Academy Award-winning short film, The Neighbor’s Window (Curry, 2019). The basic premise of the short is a mother who is growing bored with her monotonous life starts spying on her neighbor’s through their open window and gets more than a peek into their lives. The short’s main theme was other people’s lives seem more appealing until you look closer. The short is a drama, though from the first scene it could’ve almost been the start of a romantic comedy. After that, it gets much more emotional as the mother, Alli (Maria Dizzia), becomes obsessed with watching her neighbors through the window.

The Neighbor’s Window, like most films, follows the basic dramatic structure without much deviation or breaking of rules. The inciting incident is when Alli and her husband (Greg Keller) first see the neighbors having sex while they’re eating dinner and cannot stop staring at them. The first plot point is when Alli gets binoculars for her husband but then starts using them herself, the midpoint of the short is when Alli notices the neighbors sitting at their table, clearly after getting bad news. The second plot point is when Alli’s husband notices the neighbor is now bald and assume he shaved his head. This all leads to the climax where Alli sees the neighbor in a hospital bed in their apartment passed out as his wife climbs into the bed and lays with him. The film resolves with Alli going across the street after the sick husband passes away and his wife reveals to Alli that she and her husband watched and were envious of Alli and her family. 

The production design was quite good as it perfectly conveyed the two apartments for what they were: a family’s lived-in home and a newlywed couple’s apartment turned in-home hospice. The costume design also helped show how tired Alli was with her routine as well as the state of the neighbor’s lives as they never have dialogue until Alli meets the wife at the end, so their emotional state is only seen how they look and their physical actions. 

The cinematography was also interesting in that it was generally very well-lit in both apartments, but that lighting is accentuated in the voyeuristic scenes as they’re mostly at night so even when it is bright in the apartments, everything around the windows is darkness. The first and final shots are also similar in that they both have lit windows on the right side and the night sky on the left, but the final has more focus on who is seen in the window, giving the audience a voyeuristic look at them just like they had of the neighbors.

There isn’t much music in this short, but what is there is very somber to fit the emotional nature of the short. Most of the audio in this short is natural sounds and dialogue. The natural sounds help root what is happening in reality and give a sense of the familiar such as plates being set on the table or coffee being poured. Most of the dialogue isn’t needed but does show the state of mind of Alli and her husband as he quickly loses interest in the spying and she becomes infatuated with looking through the binoculars every time she’s near the window. The neighbor’s dialogue is needed, though, as it’s the best way to get the full meaning of the reveal.

The editing was not too interesting, but the editor did leave a lot of lengths in shots and there are few short takes used throughout. This allows the pacing to take its time and lets the full emotional weight sit with the viewer even when it cuts away, such as after Alli see the neighbor in the hospital bed for the first time as the impact is felt for so long that when Alli is pulled out of staring, the viewer is still thinking about it. It also helps that they cut nearly all sound out leaving the viewer thinking about how someone so full of life was quickly brought down by a fatal illness. It was noteworthy that an unknown amount of time passes throughout this short as at one point they say it was months since they first looked into the window, but there is little indication of time jumps after that.

What is useful to know for our no-budget short films is knowing how an Oscar-winning short is filmed almost entirely in two apartments and a short scene on a sidewalk. Similarly, our film will be able to be shot entirely in two areas of the backlot on campus. Limited locations clearly do not prohibit artistic expression and can actually be a boon for the creators as they’re forced to make it work with what they have. Also, while this short was simple, the production design was effective at making what is seen on screen look real and so it is very important that we are able to make what we shoot look like it is real despite filming on a backlot.

The challenge for our project, I realize, is making it look as real as this short looked. Although I’m not the production designer, as DP I can put the focus on what is real to mask what isn’t as, even in a five-minute short film, immersion is a crucial factor. To quote the movie Inception (Nolan, 2010), “Our dreams feel real while we’re in them. It’s only when we wake we realize things were strange.” My group, like all filmmakers, must endeavor to make our film look so real that the audience forgets they were even watching a movie until it is over. 

References

Curry, M. (Director). (2019). The Neighbor’s Window [Short Film]. Marshall Curry Productions.

Nolan, C. (Director). (2010). Inception [Film]. Warner Bros. Pictures.

An Inspiration

“Men are still good. We fight, we kill, we betray one another, but we can rebuild. We can do better. We will. We have to.”

-Bruce Wayne (Roven, 2016)

This quote from one of my favorite movies, “Batman v. Superman: Dawn of Justice,” has inspired me ever since I first watched the movie in 2016. In a film that shows two of the most iconic characters deal with their lowest points, it ends on an uplifting note. After Superman sacrifices his life to protect Earth, Batman, who hated and feared him until he started to know him, was inspired by him to look past the bad of humanity and find the good and he ends the film walking into the light of day. This film, and its predecessor “Man of Steel,” are two of my favorite films for reasons like this and how almost no other comic book movie inspires me like they do. Seeing heroes as powerful and iconic as Superman and Batman struggle with problems like losing their humanity after tragedy, having ptsd, or feeling isolated from the world make the characters deeply more relatable than almost any other superhero or even other versions of the two characters. Even though they’re fictional characters, when I feel down it helps knowing that someone as powerful as Superman can still struggle with their place in the world and feel alone. No one is above these problems, what matters is how we rise above it and inspire others to do the same.

Roven, C. (Producer), & Snyder, Z. (Director). (2016). Batman v. Superman: Dawn of Justice [Motion picture]. United States: Warner Bros. Pictures.

An Inspiration

This song by my favorite rock band, Breaking Benjamin, inspired me this week when I was feeling down as, even though I have listened to this song many times, I paid more attention to the lyrics and they really spoke to me more than usual. “Stripped away, we rise above it all, forgotten and betrayed. We all fall down, the pain goes on. No better than before, still broken and afraid” followed by “As I fight for one last prayer, I keep holding on. No love to believe in. As I drag the Devil down, I will stand alone. No longer defeated” definitely helped my mood combined with the fact that I already know the song very well and can easily sing along to it while driving in the car or sitting in my room. This was never my favorite song from this album, but I’m glad that I listened to it when I did as it undoubtedly inspired me to be better and stay strong while moving past my insecurities and depression.

Burnley, Benjamin (2014). Defeated. On Dark Before Dawn [digital download]. Ocean City & Hopatcong, New Jersey: Hollywood. Retrieved from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d7O-FGSkUJk

LinkedIn

Are you on LinkedIn? Looking to get a job? Then you should sign up for LinkedIn. I’ve had it for a while and, while it isn’t my most used social media, it’s still a great resource for connecting with people in different industries and it is definitely the most professional social media I have ever seen. Even if you are not interested in the useful networking opportunities it provides, the lack of toxicity of the more popular social media sites should be enticing enough for anyone to sign up for if they have not already. Check out my page here: LinkedIn.

Feedly

I hadn’t heard of Feedly until today, but it seems like a great resource to gather all the different feeds I look at in a day. It especially interests me that if I were to upgrade to a paid plan I can add in Twitter feeds which would help me cut down on the nonsense that Twitter is very much filled with and instead just see the people I actually want to follow. For now, though, I’ll stick with using it for news sources on things I care about like films and gaming. Check it out if it sounds interesting to you: Feedly.com.

An Inspiration

“The greatest teacher, failure is.” -Yoda (Kennedy, 2017)

Of all the great quotes from recent movies, this quote from one of my favorite movies of the last few years, “Star Wars Episode VIII: The Last Jedi,” has stuck with me more than any other and whenever I feel like a failure I remember this quote and see how I can learn from the situation and better myself.

Reference

Kennedy, K. (Producer), & Johnson, R. (Director). (2017). Star Wars: Episode VIII – The Last Jedi [Motion Picture]. United States: Walt Disney Pictures.