JennaF-68
jul 2025 se unió
Te damos la bienvenida a nuevo perfil
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Distintivos2
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Calificaciones1
Clasificación de JennaF-68
Reseñas1
Clasificación de JennaF-68
I watched this film in Washington, DC, in June, and I am still thinking about it every single day.
I went to the screening with my 74-year-old parents and my 17-year-old son, and we all continue to speak on a first-name basis about the family in the film, which I find extraordinary, given the names are not ones we had ever heard before. It's a testament to how quickly and powerfully Holding Liat builds both intimacy and empathy.
I know my parents were nervous that the film would be one-sided, and my son, inundated by social media's take on current affairs, went in ready to be critical. But we all emerged deeply moved and with more questions than answers. This film is not about answers. It is about remembering that the heart of any story is really about the lives and experiences of the people living it. What do they think? What do they feel? What does that make us wonder?
Close camera angles that enable you to peer right into the eyes of the people at the center of the story as they share their ever-evolving thinking, their anguish, and their passion make it impossible to look away. I can still see the people I met through this film when I close my eyes. I can remember what it felt like to watch them weep, or rage, or hope. Because of this, it feels like their story is in some way part of my own now.
Holding Liat invites us to sit with complexity, to understand that we are constantly evolving in our thinking, that we are flawed and beautiful because of this, and that our ability to make the world a better place depends on our willingness to be present FOR that complexity. I wish everyone could see this film.
I went to the screening with my 74-year-old parents and my 17-year-old son, and we all continue to speak on a first-name basis about the family in the film, which I find extraordinary, given the names are not ones we had ever heard before. It's a testament to how quickly and powerfully Holding Liat builds both intimacy and empathy.
I know my parents were nervous that the film would be one-sided, and my son, inundated by social media's take on current affairs, went in ready to be critical. But we all emerged deeply moved and with more questions than answers. This film is not about answers. It is about remembering that the heart of any story is really about the lives and experiences of the people living it. What do they think? What do they feel? What does that make us wonder?
Close camera angles that enable you to peer right into the eyes of the people at the center of the story as they share their ever-evolving thinking, their anguish, and their passion make it impossible to look away. I can still see the people I met through this film when I close my eyes. I can remember what it felt like to watch them weep, or rage, or hope. Because of this, it feels like their story is in some way part of my own now.
Holding Liat invites us to sit with complexity, to understand that we are constantly evolving in our thinking, that we are flawed and beautiful because of this, and that our ability to make the world a better place depends on our willingness to be present FOR that complexity. I wish everyone could see this film.