Pjotr Sapegin's ARIA
Aria is not the type of media I am used to watching, and I admittedly was expecting to not like it. While it wasn't the type of visuals I am usually drawn to, it did what it set out to do in the feelings it conveyed. It very viscerally portrayed loss and the hopelessness and often self destructive behaviors that result. In Butterfly's case, the self destruction ended up being literal in what was quite an unsettling scene to watch, painting a very clear picture of what it feels like to be torn apart when everything you love is taken from you.
I also found it interesting that the record player was almost always seen, being the main thing that linked Butterfly to her love until her child was born. I also found the kite imagery very intriguing, showing mother and child tethered to each other until they were split apart. Their connection running so deep and strong made it all the more tragic to again physically rather than just metaphorically see that linkage break.
All in all, I found this video to be more sorrowful than I could have anticipated a film made with puppets to ever be.
I also found it interesting that the record player was almost always seen, being the main thing that linked Butterfly to her love until her child was born. I also found the kite imagery very intriguing, showing mother and child tethered to each other until they were split apart. Their connection running so deep and strong made it all the more tragic to again physically rather than just metaphorically see that linkage break.
All in all, I found this video to be more sorrowful than I could have anticipated a film made with puppets to ever be.
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