Vadim On A Walk

Society/Short Film, Russia 2021

Stepping out of the comfort zone is never easy, but hardly any life coach or a new age smartass could explain us the basic reason for feeling unpleasant when finally taking the step to personal freedom. Probably the most basic reason for being scared of new things is the difficulty to re-orient oneself in new spaces. That confusion is the primary subject of Sasha Svirsky’s animated short film Vadim on a Walk that has recently premiered at the Berlinale Shorts competition. We meet our titular protagonist while he’s sitting in a transparent square space, picking up the courage to step out of it and explore the unknown world that lays in front of his eyes. As he moves on, his stream of consciousness, delivered by the means of voice-over narration, gets wilder and wilder, switching the topic of his thoughts faster and faster. It is followed by the switches in the animation technique and style, back and forth, with simple hand drawings and computer rendering. The protagonist’s mental landscape is also reflected in the auditive component of the film, both in the sound design that shifts between clarity and confusion shown in distortion and the loops, and in the musical background that moves from the typical synth-infused retro electronica to the uneasy acoustic territory of “Nintendo-core”. Sasha Svirsky comes from the background in painting and is a self-taught animator that likes to play with the stereotypes, outside of his artistic comfort zone. He does the same thing with Vadim on a Walk in a manner that is not exactly groundbreaking, but effective in what it’s trying to convey.
9 min
HD
Starting at 14
Audio language:
Russian
Subtitles:
EnglishFrenchGermanRussian

More information

Director:

Sasha Svirsky

Misc:

Sasha Svirsky (Animation)

Original title:

Vadim na progulke

Original language:

Russian

Format:

16:9 HD, Color

Age rating:

Starting at 14

Audio language:

Russian

Subtitles:

EnglishFrenchGermanRussian