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running time: 4:47 |
Film: Skylight
Director:
David Baas
Film website:
http://www.skylight-short.com/
Production Group:
Production Group Website:
Date Completed:
2009-02
Festival Viewing:
(10) 10 Gallon Hat
Film description:

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A cavernous ice cave and snowscape in the Antarctic. Voiceover narration describes its desolate quality in an overly solemn, dramatic, nature documentary-like tone.
A lone penguin against another stark background. The narrator describes him using ridiculous superlatives, nobility, majesty, etc., contrasting with his mundane activity and appearance.
Dramatic music swells, the penguin begins to waddle, he passes through a small group of other penguins, the camera, mimicking the handheld movement of a documentary camera.
Shockingly, as our first penguin leaves frame, passing through a ray of sunlight, he explodes in a blinding flash. In the confusion, our camera reels, trying to assess the situation. The other penguins, seemingly oblivious, stare off into space.
As snow settles from the blast, the remains of our wandering penguin spins in the air, inches from the ground, and drops with a thud. Revealed, the carcass amid three others, all looking like roasted turkeys, under a beam of sunlight.
The narrator booms that the hole in the ozone layer has caused this cataclysm. The other penguins, ignorant of the peril about them, continue to mill aimlessly about.
A title card appears, asking for donations to the fund for "Inconsequential Wildlife", denoting that no one, even the filmmakers, really cares what happens to things removed from their immediate experience. Cut back to a lone remaining penguin, whose fate is probably sealed. Cut to black and credits.
A closing montage shows the fate of other "Inconsequential" animals worldwide if these environmental trends continue.
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