Anton Tubero Indie Film Top |top|
Many critics dismissed it for poor production quality and a perceived lack of substantive narrative. Cultural Artifact:
The film’s soundtrack was a study in hush: tape loops, a neighbor playing a piano three floors down, and an old vinyl recording of a jazz saxophone that smelled of smoke and a city that had been. Anton used sound to glue the pieces. In one sequence, the vinyl store owner, an aging man named Ren, spins records and talks about a song he lost once and never found again. His speech is patchy—he remembers titles and not lyrics—and Anton edited the lines into a loop that becomes a private refrain through the film, an earworm of regret. anton tubero indie film top
