In Untitled, a young girl races across the countryside with acute urgency to reach home to find that the house is derelict, her parents are gone, and she is an elderly woman. Back at the nursing home, she enters an intimate dialogue with her granddaughter who attempts to quell her fears and encourages a non-judgmental acceptance of the state of her mind. This film is an impressionistic film about memory, the experience of time, and a poetic rethinking of neuroscientific narratives on the brain. It is also a coming-of-age story: a young girl realizes she is an old woman and an old woman realizes she is a child.
In Untitled, a young girl races across the countryside with acute urgency to reach home to find that the house is derelict, her parents are gone, and she is an elderly woman. Back at the nursing home, she enters an intimate dialogue with her granddaughter who attempts to quell her fears and encourages a non-judgmental acceptance of the state of her mind. This film is an impressionistic film about memory, the experience of time, and a poetic rethinking of neuroscientific narratives on the brain. It is also a coming-of-age story: a young girl realizes she is an old woman and an old woman realizes she is a child.