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Perpetually half way there
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Nothing mesmerizing
One of the most intriguing dynamic notations in
Western classical music is diminuendo al niente (fade away to nothing). When have we arrived? When did it
end? Or is it the silent "glue" to the next idea. Too frequently, today's
"modern" performers slap over their music sheets and launch the next movement
before the "moment" of artistic void has been achieved; to show that they
realize when greatness has been "heard" (cross-reference below), equally
insensitive audiences clap thunderously while bows still hover over the
strings. We live in a world that more and more cannot stand the absence of
"something" to distract us from the emptiness of soul fronted by designer-driven
outer shells that embody ourselves.
With ZERO the inside story, Elida Schogt challenges
humanity to come to grips with its epidemic façade of living for and through
others instead of facing internal demons, bringing them to light so that real
life can begin. It is a spectacular personal and artistic achievement that
belies its thoughtful, quiet rhythm that, like master composers before her, can
have a huge impact for those who choose to hear the message. Repeated viewings
are recommended, such is the multi-dimensional depth of her vision.
Music plays a key part in this journey into hidden self,
unlocked by drilling down into the relationship of zero to nothingness. Tom
Third's score is a marvel of audio augmentation of Schogt's thoughtful
near-hypnotic pacing. The Milhaud-like saxophone emerges hauntingly from a bed
of low strings, first alone, later partnered with another single-reed mate.
During the more pedantic opening moments the "woman" (Kate
Alton whose tone and timing complements both the daringly sparse frames and the
soundscape's flow), using third person pronouns to add yet another layer of
distance, lets the explanations of the subject matter espoused by mathematician,
Trueman MacHenry and Hindu philosopher, Amitabh Bhattacharyg reach into her self
as she takes step after step after step to her deepest secret: trapped for
decades in her own personal infinity.
But the solution can only come from India where the concept
of zero was delivered centuries ago by journeying Babylonians where it rested
and permeated many cultures before being exported to Europe. The transition to
the sub-continent is the orchestral "A" sounding above the unseen musician's
cackle-a subtle zero lodged on the second space of the treble clef seamlessly
links East and West.
Once safely in Varanasi (Benares, the City of Light) the
woman's darkness feels the confidence to show itself further. Steps (steep
ghats) must be climbed, hundreds, thousands-always half-way closer to the
truth, but not before pain and despair burble to the surface.
"I am dirt, I am garbage, I hate myself."
And contradictions abound; things can't be simultaneously
true and false:
"I must speak, I cannot speak."
In extreme close-up, her mouth becomes a human zero, both
the keeper and releaser of the void within, waiting in the mystical city, on the
often fetid shore of Mother Ganges, wanting part of herself die so that "she can
live again."
Bright orange floods the screen (unintentionally evoking
the horror of Agent Orange, so disturbingly depicted in Aftermath: Remnants
of War, cross-reference below) while the distant sun flexes its
circular power. Those below drape themselves in its hue (evoking the memory of
her brother's quilt) and offer fire to their God, Shiva, in hopes that internal
light will be returned in the bargain.
A lip-framed countdown is the final push over the precipice
of revelation-no sound but the pent up words; the notion more important than
the content.
The strings reappear and, in an unforgettable sequence
where sight and sound combine into touch, the narrator's voice becomes the
melody weaving its thoughts onto the fabric of the mind before the flutes lift
everything ethereally, leaving us to reflect with the sunbeams skittering
incongruously over the dank water.
Now-finally face forward-the next journey begins, every
arrival being another departure, filled with infinite possibility, ∞...

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Director/Producer/Writer |
Elida Schogt |
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Cinematography |
Marcos Arriaga, Ajay Novonha |
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Editor |
Sarah Peddie |
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Sound Design |
Mike Filippov |
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Original Music |
Tom Third |
Cross-references: Midori endures audience follies;
Aftermath: The Remnants of War; JWR Interviews
Elida Schogt