Survival has nothing elegant about it. On the contrary, it often appears as a dirty, exhausting struggle, fought in a world that seems to have already decided who has the right to exist and who must be pushed to the margins. ‘Behind The Reflection‘ is precisely about this form of survival. Director Velton J. Lishke depicts the drama of a queer woman trying to find her place in a social space dominated by aggression, prejudice, and toxic forms of masculinity. In other words, for Shae, identity is a wound constantly exposed to the gaze of others. Therefore, the short film tackles simulation as a defence mechanism and about the way in which a person ends up playing a role in order not to be destroyed by the world around them, even if that role takes them further and further away from their true self.

 

Shae attempts in vain to adapt to a reality that rejects her almost instinctively. In a brutal environment, where marginality and self-destruction seem to be the only accepted forms of language, the protagonist tries to conform and hide her fragility. But every gesture of integration turns into a new form of alienation, until her encounter with a woman who has embraced her identity creates a crack in an inner wall. This becomes the beginning of a path toward acceptance, with all the hesitation and pain such a process entails.

 

Velton J. Lishke films this world without beautifying it. His realistic, harsh, almost miserabilist style searches for the texture of life on the margins through a series of oppressive interiors, hostile streets, tired faces and bodies, that always seem to be on the defensive. There is an authenticity here that, through the rawness of its social observation, may recall the cinema of Marc Munden or Andrea Arnold, especially in the way the camera seems interested in people before it is interested in the message. The director connects the queer experience to a concrete environment, to emotional poverty, everyday violence, and the desperate need to be seen without being judged. Beyond the technical strengths of the cinematic construction, however, the short film’s greatest force comes from the protagonist’s performance. Rarely does one feel so clearly how organically an actor or an actress inhabits a character. Her presence has something raw, vulnerable, and unsettlingly true about it, and every glance seems to carry a history of rejection and the desire for liberation. ‘Behind The Reflection’ is a painful but necessary short film about the moment when the mirror stops being a place of shame and slowly becomes the beginning of a possible healing.

 

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