Have you ever experienced an artwork that, in the moment, made only a minor impression, but days, months or even years later reverberated in a powerful way? In this video essay, Cormac Donnelly, a senior lecturer in film at Liverpool John Moores University in the UK, recalls having such an experience with a scene from the Steven Spielberg film Minority Report (2002), in which the protagonist revisits a hologram of his deceased son. Conceived in response to a ‘prompt text’ by the media scholar Ariel Avissar, Donnelly’s curious construction weaves together scenes from Minority Report, a review of the film he wrote as a younger man, philosophy lectures, fragments of Avissar’s words and Donnelly’s own material archive of the film. At once intricate and moving, the piece forms a provocative meditation on art as ceaseless interaction, and how our memory so often feels beyond our control – or even our understanding.
Donnelly created the video essay for [in]Transition, ‘the first peer-reviewed academic journal of videographic film and moving image studies’.
Director: Cormac Donnelly
Writer: Ariel Avissar
video
War and peace
‘She is living on in many hearts’ – Otto Frank on the legacy of his daughter’s diary
12 minutes
video
Art
Why Diego Velázquez needed a lifetime to paint his enigmatic masterpiece
31 minutes
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Family life
The stream-of-consciousness thoughts and memories that emerge while cooking a meal
5 minutes
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Film and visual culture
A lush animated opus evokes the frenzied pace of modern life
4 minutes
video
Family life
The precious family keepsakes that hold meaning for generations
10 minutes
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Neuroscience
This intricate map of a fruit fly brain could signal a revolution in neuroscience
2 minutes
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Information and communication
Coverage of the ‘balloon boy’ hoax forms a withering indictment of for-profit news
17 minutes
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Childhood and adolescence
Marmar is living through a devastating war – but she’d rather tell you about her new dress
8 minutes
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Meaning and the good life
Wander through the English countryside with two teens trying to make sense of the world
10 minutes