Buried grief does not disappear simply because it goes unspoken. In fact, it lingers beneath the surface, shaping everything from the inside. This could be the main idea of ‘The Silence of the Mime‘, directed by Avyel Cohen, which follows a young girl who buries the pain of her mother’s violent death beneath a fragile surface of composure. Rather than presenting trauma through explicit breakdown, the short film approaches it as something displaced and carefully hidden. Inflected with subtle psychoanalytic undertones, the narrative blurs the boundaries between waking life and dream, while moments repeat with slight distortions, as if the mind itself were trying to change what it cannot endure. Thus, the mime announced in the title becomes more than a figure; it is a metaphor for silence, self-censorship, or the protective strategies the girl unconsciously adopts. Like a mime, she performs without speaking, re-enacting fragments of memory without naming them while building an inner stage where pain is translated into gesture rather than language.
A series of psychotherapy and hypnosis sessions help a young girl reach a new level of understanding about a recurring nightmare. Who or what is the mime that keeps appearing in her dreams? And, more importantly, what is actually hidden behind the door that the mime is trying to protect at all costs?
The short film moves carefully between restrained domestic realism and oneiric projections that encapsulate the child’s traumatic experience. The instrumental score, suggestive and unobtrusive, threads these layers together, amplifying the emotional undercurrent without overwhelming it. Through this interplay, Avyel Cohen proposes not simply a portrait of suffering, but a process where healing is not sudden or triumphant but unfolds through confrontation, through the slow recognition of what has been repressed. We are in front of a story about the depths of the human psyche, about vulnerability, and about the possibility of renewal through love, while suggesting that emancipation from the demons of the past comes from daring to face them. In guiding its young protagonist toward that fragile act of acknowledgment, ‘The Silence of the Mime’ invites viewers into an exercise of self-awareness, reminding us that even the most guarded silence carries the desire to be heard.



