Showing posts with label Film Review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Film Review. Show all posts
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The Lady Bug Film Review By Felix Vasquez Jr.

Mayye Zayed's thirty five second short is a cute and abundantly meaningful little short about slick tricks and using your advantages to get ahead in life. While barely a minute long, "The Lady Bug" does have some top notch clay animation that dabbles in to the whimsical about a ladybug who drops down on to a floor and ends up stuck in a conundrum of her own in a maze she can't possibly solve. At the last minute she decides she's had enough of trying to figure out the problem and merely goes for the easy solution and uses her advantages to get herself out of a tough bind. Mayye Zayed's direction is cute and simplistic while the animation is adorable with the Ladybug's design about as stripped down and to the point as can possibly be.

An experimental animation short in its truest form, "The Ladybug" is a cute short film with great seamless animation and a simplistic story to get the point across about the slick ladybug and the way she handles her seemingly life changing ordeal. 

Felix Vasquez Jr. 
3/13/11


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Girls' Talk Film Review By Mai Ayyad


Girls' Talk: Finding Vent, Wherever it May Be


There are very rare moments, in which the self can find its release, can strip itself of all its pretences and speak its inner thoughts.
This happens in Mayye Zayed’s short film Girls’ Talk in the most strange of places. Set entirely in a girls’ school bathroom, the film shows the distant, yet very deep friendship that springs unconventionally between two teenage girls.
The rebellious girls do not adhere to the strict note that states, ‘Writing on the bathroom door is uncivilised behaviour.’ Instead, the bathroom door becomes their costumed Facebook wall.
One time, a girl writes a random thought and returns the next day to find that another girl has replied to her. She replies back and they continue corresponding for a long time, without ever discovering each other’s identity.
The way of communication, weird as it may be, gives room for the girls to express themselves freely. As they start to develop a sense of attachment, their thoughts become more and more intimate. They wait for the answer that feels like salvation to them.
Girls' Talk is such a beautiful and delicate film. The plotline is smart and realistic, the need to talk and relate to someone cannot always be fulfilled in regular relationships. When talking anonymously, embarrassment does not exist; you are saving face and finding relief.
The scenes, shots and lighting create a very lively image that instantly captivates the audience, and the story has a strong sense of familiarity to it. The film’s details are very abundant, ranging from the girls’ clothes and pencil cases that they take to the bathroom, to the numerous witty comments scribbled on the door.
Renaud Pijselman’s music is absolutely captivating and an excellent choice; certainly one of the most remarkable features of the film. It goes very well with the story, and keeps resonating in the viewers mind.
Girls’ Talk is produced by the Jesuit Cultural Centre as part of an independent filmmaking workshop, so one can assume that it is nearly a no-budget film. Naturally, it has some setbacks in sound and quality, but the end result remedies all that.
Mai Ayyad
Cairo360

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