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On director Josh Hughes press website, he explains how "The Octopus" is
a very personal film for him but intentionally cryptic. For many, it's
garnered a lot of definitions and dimensions. As well it's also garnered
some hidden meanings that Hughes is surprised to discover from his
audience. No matter what you pull from his two and a half minute
animated short, there's not a single doubt that "The Octopus" is a truly
powerful and startling animated short about a couple on the brink of
destruction and the child that will inevitably pay for their pain.
Whether or not that's the blunt meaning or only one of the meanings
remains unknown, but "The Octopus" will translate well with many
audience who will find something truly heartbreaking with the symbolism
of a pigeon who transforms in to a seagull pulled in by the horrific
tentacles of an octopus wading in the water. My definition of "The
Octopus" is simply the heartbreak of marriage and the child who will
soon know what pain is.
Worse yet, he will know what his
parents pain is and will be too small to even comprehend a
grain
of what they're enduring with one another. The child
in the corner is a clear cut indicator of the boy who will
be punished by his mom for his dad's torment, and a son who
will be home every night awaiting
his dad's inevitable
return in hopes of garnering some attention, and as such
desire a world where emotional pain is not a requisite for
his daily routine. |
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"The Octopus" is a wonderful animated
short film, one that Hughes explains took two years, all to boil down to
two and a half minutes. And the hard work shows, as the hand drawn black
and white short film is startling in its sweeping imagery and seamless
ability to morph in to the symbols Hughes conjures up that are obviously
immensely personal and extremely painful to recollect in mere words.
Hughes explains in his press site that conveying his message about the
movie would be too complicated, and I'm more than willing to believe it
so. Clearly this is a man who knows adult problems long before he could
develop in to one on his own, and through that his torment is made
apparent with "The Octopus."
Too many of us lose our innocence before we're old enough to learn how
to ride a bike, and Josh Hughes film feels very much about that hard
fact that we grow up too soon and experience the pain our parents force
on us. Though it will carry meanings for every audience, "The Octopus"
is very much about familial discord and the robbery of childhood to me.
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