LUGHEAD | Omeleto

preview_player
Показать описание
Two strangers meet in a motel room.

Owen and Jill are two strangers who meet up at night at a motel. They decide to go back to the room, where a seductively dressed Jill pours Owen some champagne, they exchange money and they sit on the bed to discuss what they're going to do.

Owen talks about his troubled marriage, even though he and his wife have a baby daughter together. Jill listens, asking him questions and drawing him out. It helps her understand what she needs to do for Owen, she says. But as their conversation continues, things reveal themselves as much different from what they seem, for both Owen and Jill.

Writer-director Corey Shurge's short seems to be a somber slice-of-life narrative, where cleverly constructed and written dialogue reveals unusual depths of character and two people often connect through mutual self-revelation. The film's craft focuses on writing and performance, threaded with moments of often ironic, underplayed humor coming from Owen's lack of self-awareness and, well, lugheadedness. But the storytelling has a craftiness that unfurls itself with slow but sure-handed execution, slyly puncturing expectations and revealing a much darker side to its meaning.

The noir-soaked, shadowy cinematography has both an ordinary flatness and a moodiness that are reminiscent of Edward Hopper paintings, particularly in a few prominent wide shots that situate small, isolated human figures amidst a barren empty suburban cityscape. Hopper's great paintings explored loneliness, and in many ways, loneliness is the driving emotional force in this narrative, particularly for Owen, who is played with subtlety and sympathy by actor Aaron Merke with a wounded everyman quality. Owen's marriage is troubled; he says his wife hates him and verbally abuses him, calling him insults like the one that inspires the film's title. Viewers understand why he is looking for solace and sex elsewhere.

The other element in this narrative equation is Jill, played by actor Jade Michael in a clever, sophisticated performance that offers a cryptic and mysterious contrast to Owen's more vulnerably open character. Part of Jill's enigma is due to her work, and part of it is due to her narrative function in the first half of the film, where she functions as a sounding board for Owen's marital woes. But with a subtle sleight of hand, the writing and dialogue reveal the unvarnished truth of both Owen's situation and Jill's role, deftly undercutting expectations, shifting the genre and propelling the narrative into an unexpected conclusion.

We'd love to say more about how the film's seemingly modest craftsmanship reveals itself to be controlled and confident in the end, or how Owen's conception of himself as a victim is undercut by his blind spots. But that would give away what makes watching LUGHEAD so fun and engaging. What we can say is that the short's surprises are entertaining but also thought-provoking, and with the unsettled feelings it evokes, viewers may be thinking about Owen and Jill well after the story ends.
Рекомендации по теме
Комментарии
Автор

I love how she symolised "switching on and off" by flicking a switch in the end

jonathanjoseph
Автор

Beautiful woman asks me back to her place.
Me: Serial killer.

davidguthrie
Автор

Is anybody else obsessed watching this short films? I am 🙋‍♀️

yajizlopez
Автор

Thought she was a "suicide assistant" at first, then hitman, then when he rubbed his chest I thought, "yeah this is an uno reverse card by the wife"

TheSecondVersion
Автор

Not gonna lie, my mind was somewhere else.

abinothayyilsanoj
Автор

She left her fingerprints everywhere. Rookie assassin

aarohazel
Автор

I got stuck on how a pizza delivery guy can afford to hire anyone to kill his wife.

bhing
Автор

This was a perfect setup for the twist. The cash in the envelope, the notel motel, the attractive young woman -- it was genius.

Cartier_specialist
Автор

"I don't know, 4 months or something." He doesn't know exactly how old his own baby is? That's when I pretty much lost all sympathy!

ChickensAndGardening
Автор

“Do I strike you as being unreliable?” That hit different after the twist.

andrewebbs
Автор

He just needs to remember a simple thing parents teach, never eat anything from a stranger and share location with a guardian before going to his or her place.

janheart
Автор

Omeleto prove as every time that we don’t need a 1 hour movie to be satisfied.

daynee
Автор

Actual plot twist, the assassin is his daughter from an alternate timeline where he gets his wife assassinated, and the daughter came back to take revenge...

dannybenhur
Автор

She was Lying 🤥
This wasn't her first time, she is a pro

Prateek-hpsg
Автор

Wow, that was wholesome! The casting was perfect. And Jade Michael deserves huge roles in big budget feature films. She's classy, cool and competent. Hope it happens.

lloydrobert
Автор

Moral of the story: He should have brought his own Coors Light

bukitkatilmp
Автор

Hum at 7:05 her glass is empty and she sets it down on the night stand where it's magically 1/4 full

jims
Автор

Moral of the story: If you are below average looking and a overly magnificient creature says yes to you, You dead.

TalhaMalik
Автор

That was a PERFECT short!!! Seriously, you know they make 2 hr movies with the same premise!?🤯 We got EVERYTHING we needed from a ten minute short with 2 characters. 👍👍

michellejester
Автор

I love how this was done - marvelous. And her character's cool, businesslike demeanor was dead on. 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻

pjesf