Meshes of the Afternoon Comments

  • Camila 2022-03-22 09:02:57

    How to show someone a dream you had a nap on a summer...

  • Marlin 2022-03-19 09:01:10

    ...

  • Justus 2022-03-19 09:01:10

    Maya Deron's iconic montage clips are particularly avant-garde visually, with a lot of psychological symbols used; more than ten years later, the composition of Japanese scorer Sadaji Ito adds a sense of mystery to the film; the addition of sound makes this film full of thinking 's pioneering experimental works are more...

  • Lacy 2022-03-19 09:01:10

    Should a movie just tell what you think or should someone read it? Even if you don't know the symbols of the knife, key, flower, stairs, you can feel some of the mysteries. After understanding these symbols, you have more ideas, or after you explain it too much, you can slap it yourself and think it's delicious enough to chew. Which one? There are reasons to be happy at every level. I think it's a smart...

  • Alejandra 2022-03-19 09:01:10

    Too obscure, too...

  • Keagan 2022-03-19 09:01:10

    In the first half of the pre-predicted dream and the interpretation of the dream, the key is a fascinating passage. The hidden danger is vividly depicted with classical narrative techniques. The key is equivalent to a knife because it hurts when opened, and the door itself is a metaphor for sex. The original image prototype of the faceless man Probably the mirror on the face here reflects one's own desires. Flowers are symbols of chastity. The whole film is nothing but...

  • Axel 2022-03-18 09:01:09

    Maya Deren was born at an untimely time, and the film consciousness is even beyond...

  • Chandler 2022-03-18 09:01:09

    I am also in a...

  • Deja 2022-03-17 09:01:10

    The multi-layered dream nesting, the symbolic metaphor of flowers, keys and knives, the shots of legs and projections are very interesting, as for more psychoanalysis, I really don’t understand, but surreal things are always very cool, aren’t...

  • Lamar 2022-03-17 09:01:10

    The Lost Afternoon, which thoroughly applied Lacan's theory, is still a model for depicting dreams in movies. Deren's ideas in images are so mature, and the whole film seems to make people dream one after another. Dream come. Aside from the obvious symbols such as flowers, keys, knives, etc., the most interesting part of the film is the ending: the image of the man in the dream is proved to be the mirror projection of the woman, and the attempt to break the fantasy eventually shatters the...