Window Boy Would also Like to Have a Submarine
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A young sailor does a menial job for a huge luxury cruise ship travelling across Patagonia. He finds a door mysteriously leading to an apartment located at somewhere in Latin America. When he gets bored of his life on the cruise ship, he sneaks into the apartment to take a shower or observe a woman living there. He freely crosses the boundary between the two places. The cruise ship serves as a hub leading to two completely unrelated places: an apartment resided by a woman in a town like Montevideo and a hut in the Philippines. The three places in the film are physically remote from each other, but they do exist in the world. Director Alex PIPERNO takes advantage of fantasy and film, creating a mythical story by interweaving remote places, solitude, and imagination. In the world that he created, it sometimes seems that the physical distance among the places are highlighted. Instead, one may find that the seemingly remote places are indeed, somehow linked to each other. The film focuses on the critical point right before the separate world gets connected. The tension and hesitation complete this film by unique cinematic imagination. [Sung MOON]
Jeonju Office (54999) 2F, JEONJU Cine Complex, 22, Jeonjugaeksa 3-gil, Wansan-gu, Jeonju-si, Jeollabuk-do, Republic of Korea
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(54999) JEONJU Cine Complex, 22, Jeonjugaeksa 3-gil, Wansan-gu, Jeonju-si, Jeollabuk-do, Republic of Korea
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