A Recent Trend: Movies About Presence | Sojourners

A Recent Trend: Movies About Presence

In a climate of overstimulation, these movies invite viewers to be still.
A man is lying down on the floor of his room on tatami mats, with a cassette player and several cassettes neatly organized under an open window.
From Perfect Days

ONE WAY TO take a culture’s temperature at a given moment is to look at the art it produces. This is particularly true in film — a visual medium and a business largely driven by audiences’ perceived interests. Movies reflect their times, not just visually, but thematically.

Films made during the Great Depression, for example, included social realist dramas like Leo McCarey’s Make Way for Tomorrow, about an elderly couple who lose their home to foreclosure, and works of optimistic patriotism like Frank Capra’s Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, where Jimmy Stewart brings his determined charm to Capitol Hill. Others, like Capra’s romantic comedy It Happened One Night, offered troubled moviegoers good-natured escapism.

So, what’s on our minds recently, cinematically speaking? Among other things, a pandemic, corrupt institutions, international tragedies, and (another) contentious election year. There are many reasons viewers might want to escape into simpler or more fantastical worlds.

One recent trend, however, has surprised me: movies about presence.

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A rosary, an open-faced locket, a flip-flop, a used water bottle, and a dying flower lying abandoned in the dirt.
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