Five storytellers take off from a physical characteristic of the elephant, much like the fable of the blind men, where each constructs a different whole from a fragment. Elephant-related images are then inserted into their stories, subjectively and associatively. “Elephant Dreams” is essentially about the action of memory and the imagination at work. Everyone makes his or her own story. “Davis plays with the power of suggestion and our knowledge of filmic language to undermine a simple relationship with story and image, and to create a collage of simple pieces that add up to a complex and allusive whole. This postmodern film text is a multi- voiced, disjunctive deconstruction of narratives which doesn’t presume a single reading, but invites the viewer to construct his/her own collage from the puzzle presented.” Don Terry, Cinema Canada
Elephant Dreams
- Film Maker
- Davis, Martha
- Year
- 1987
- Country
- Canada
- Language
- Format
- 16mm
- Length
- 17
- Genre
- experimental, narrative
- Category
- Animals, Ecology, Memory, Nature, Work about Women, Work by Women


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