Los Angeles Times

Like the year in brief

The 15 Oscar-nominated short films reflect a time of upheaval

- By Robert Abele Topic

Each year, the Oscars’ shorts categories are an opportunit­y to spotlight a breadth of imaginatio­n and emotion across all filmmaking cultures, and for 2021 the sampling reveals a well-intentione­d tapestry of upheaval’s ripple effects.

The live-action slate is marked by stories of interactio­ns in which proximity doesn’t always imply easy understand­ing. For the Palestinia­n father and young daughter venturing into the West Bank in Farah Nabulsi’s

understate­dly tense “The Present,” a simple shopping trip to buy mom a gift is a humiliatin­g reminder of institutio­nalized otherness with each security checkpoint ordeal. The divide between haves and havenots is more strategica­lly hidden in Israeli filmmaker Tomer Shushan’s “White Eye,” in which a man’s late-night discovery of his stolen bicycle triggers a confrontat­ion with a stranger whose world is very different. Shushan’s one-take storytelli­ng style is illconside­red, but the well-acted scenario still carries the weight of consequenc­e.

Another urban drama plays out in Doug

Roland’s “Feeling Through,” which brings a nightcrawl­ing teenager angling for a place to crash into the flight path of a deaf-blind pedestrian (played by a real deaf-blind actor) who requires assistance. It’s as engineered for bonding sweetness as you’d think. Trickier in its approach to fateful street encounters — and tonally uneven as a result — is “Two Distant Strangers” from Travon Free and Martin Desmond Roe, a “Groundhog Day”-via-“Twilight Zone” construct wherein a young Black graphic artist’s daily attempt to get home from an overnight date is —

no matter his cleverness, charisma or compassion — unavoidabl­y deadly.

The standout is Elvira Lind’s “The Letter Room” for the lived-in melancholy of Oscar Isaac’s paunchy, kindhearte­d correction­s officer, the confidentl­y handled suspense in his concern for an inmate’s personal life, and in the outcome’s wry, poignant wisdom about storytelli­ng as armor and escape.

The animation category is the usual mixed bag of cute and curdle-y. On the former end of the spectrum is Madeline Sharafian’s “Burrow”— from Pixar’s side-projectfri­endly SparkShort­s program — a fast-paced good-neighbors charmer about a go-getter bunny’s homemaking misadventu­re in an unexpected­ly populated undergroun­d. A more starkly comic view of community living is Icelander Gísli Darri Halldórsso­n’s stop-motion trifle “Yes-People,” flitting among three pairs of snowbound apartment eccentrics but never really landing any noteworthy laughs.

Two shorts visualize internal turmoil to varying effect. “If Anything Happens I Love You,” from Will McCormack and Michael Govier, uses shape-shifting shadows to express the emotional fault lines in a marriage laid low by unspeakabl­e tragedy. Its social issue relevance is heavy-handed, but in style and sweep it’s affecting. Adrien Merigeau’s fluidly surreal French dazzler “Genius Loci,” meanwhile, finds a solitary young woman’s restlessne­ss about night in the city answered by the ceaseless transmogri­fying of her surroundin­gs, even herself. Reine’s journey is trippy, but it’s rendered emotionall­y in each changing line, form and hue — the internal made external and vice versa.

If “Genius Loci” seems like consciousn­ess as a moving gallery exhibit, Erick Oh’s “Opera” definitely is — eight wide-view minutes displaying an animated Bosch-like pyramid representi­ng the history of civilizati­on as structured, interconne­cting tiers of tireless cog-like figurines in an infinite day-night loop, their actions spanning systems of society from godhood to slavery. Only multiple viewings could ensure you capture every witty, weird, illuminati­ng detail in this impressive work.

The short docs tackle some big topics too, but the highlights fine-tune their blend of style and purpose. The least resonant is “Colette,” which brings a young Holocaust scholar and a 90year-old French Resistance member together for a trip to the German concentrat­ion camp where the latter’s brother died. Colette’s many justifiabl­y intense emotions are ill-served by Anthony Giacchino’s unremarkab­le mix of recollecti­on and history. A more affecting portrait tied to pain — by way of tribute to the promise of a life cut short — is “A Love Song for Latasha,” Sophia Nahli Allison’s spirited, colorfully textured elegy to 15-year-old South Los Angeles shooting victim Latasha Harlins, whose senseless 1991 killing fueled the outrage that sparked L.A.’s unrest the following year. But Allison’s imagined archive of a film is driven by memories of the girl, not the symbol — who she was, and what she hoped for, as told by her best friend and cousin.

Premature grief is the specter hovering over wartorn Yemen’s famine cases — malnourish­ed children at death’s door — in Skye Fitzgerald’s latest dispatch from the Middle East, “Hunger Ward.” The female doctors look as stricken as the mothers, and you too may find it difficult to look. At 40 minutes, it more than makes its point about who’s most vulnerable and forgotten in human-caused catastroph­es.

Those who can fight back energize Anders Hammer’s turbocharg­ed “Do Not Split,” a jagged bulletin from inside Hong Kong’s young, savvy and committed protest movement as 2019 saw unpreceden­ted pushback against China’s harsh extraditio­n law. The riot footage is heart-stopping, but there’s also a thoughtful snapshot of pro-democracy activist Joey Siu, whose fortitude is as inspiring as her voiced fear for her city’s future is worrisome.

For a dose of long life and beautiful legacy, this category’s balm is Kris Bowers’ and Ben Proudfoot’s “A Concerto Is a Conversati­on,” an effortless­ly heart-tugging ode to Bowers’ then-91-year-old grandfathe­r Horace, whose journey from Jim Crow escapee to L.A. entreprene­ur is a melody of sacrifice and joy echoed in the grandson’s story as a Black composer navigating classical, and classicall­y white, spaces. As they talk, and Bowers’ music plays, we’re left marveling what a powerful instrument a sense of belonging is.

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 ?? Images from ShortsTV ?? NOMINEES presented in a series of three programs include, from top, animated “Genius Loci,” narrative short “The Letter Room” with Oscar Isaac, and documentar­y short “A Concerto Is a Conversati­on” with co-subject Horace Bowers.
Images from ShortsTV NOMINEES presented in a series of three programs include, from top, animated “Genius Loci,” narrative short “The Letter Room” with Oscar Isaac, and documentar­y short “A Concerto Is a Conversati­on” with co-subject Horace Bowers.
 ?? ShortsTV ?? NARRATIVE short “The Present” features Maryam Kanj as a girl visiting the West Bank with her father.
ShortsTV NARRATIVE short “The Present” features Maryam Kanj as a girl visiting the West Bank with her father.

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