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SNOW | Omeleto

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Omeleto

A young boy accidentally injures a girl and abandons her in the snow.


SNOW is used with permission from Alex Murawski. Learn more at https://alexmurawski.com.au.


A young 11yearold boy named Sam is playing with his friend outside in the snow when he accidentally knocks her unconscious.

Overwhelmed and seemingly ashamed, he leaves her to go back to his home, where he is essentially the head of household after the death of his father. Sam is burdened with caring for his brother and himself, since his mom is rendered immobile by her overwhelming grief.

But as a storm comes into the area, Sam decides to head back to help his friend, only to find her gone. His policeman uncle comes by his home, seemingly on the trail of the now missing girl, and Sam finds himself in a situation that just may be too much for him.

Writerdirector Alex Murawski's short drama is an exceptionally wellcomposed, quiet film, with a very lean script and dialogue and precise yet unadorned cameralwork and cinematography. The story, however, begins in dramatic fashion, setting up the question of whether or not the girl will be saved and whether Sam will reckon with the consequences of his action.

But as the film proceeds, it also becomes something else: a character study of a child who is burdened too soon and too heavily with responsibility, and the toll that growing up before their time exacts on children who are forced to act like adults. There is no maudlin emotion, though, thanks to a strippeddown storytelling approach to an emotionally complex story. The snowcovered setting also emphasizes the film's sense of isolation and severity, as does the documentarylike camerawork.

Sam is played with stoicism and great weight by young performer Landon Edwards, who matteroffactly takes on his responsibility with a sense of stoicism and strength. Yet we can see flickers of the child that he still is, as well as the great, unexpressed sadness he feels and yet can't quite voice in his life.

The tough, unsentimental performance and the cleareyed, precise storytelling it serves ably portrays both the great resilience that children have in even the most difficult circumstances, but also their tremendous vulnerability and innocence. Both dimensions coexist in the story, which only amplifies the quiet heartbreak of Sam's life.

SNOW may seem almost minimalistic in execution, with its pared down dialogue and its unadorned sound design. But it mines rich emotional territory as it takes us through Sam's world. Though at moments bleak, it ends with a gentle, wellearned grace note that hinges on the recognition that a child, no matter how capable or strong, is still a child still in need of guidance, nurturing and care. Sam gets a moment of this grace when he's seen for what he is a child who has taken on too much and gets understanding and compassion, even in the middle of this tough, cold, snowcovered world.

posted by taoitearxz