A Poignant Animation, ‘Sisters’ Explores What It Means to Set Ourselves Free


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A Poignant Animation, ‘Sisters’ Explores What It Means to Set Ourselves Free

Most of us can imagine a time when we felt tethered to something or someone we knew wasn’t right for us. Perhaps a job takes too much energy, a loved one needs care that’s physically and emotionally demanding, or we find ourselves in a situation where we feel stuck and don’t know how to let go. That’s the universally relatable premise of the enigmatic short film “Sisters.”

The short animated film is directed by Andrea Szelesová and produced by Pure Shore Films. It follows the mysterious routine of a young woman. We observe a daily trip to feed and water an unusually large figure that seems to grow bigger every day, half-wedged into the earth amid an expansive meadow.

a still from an animated film of a young woman giving a huge figure, stuck in the ground, a drink of water from a sack

As time passes, the interaction becomes more exhausting, and it appears the monumental figure’s health is slowly fading. But what emerges in her place is just as beautiful as the tender care that the protagonist provided all along, granted she can appreciate the situation for what it has become.

“What we love about ‘Sisters’ is that everyone can find their own meaning in it,” Pure Shore says in a comment. “Indeed, it is about ‘letting go,’ freeing ourselves from what holds us back, whatever that may be.”

See the full film on Vimeo.

a still from an animated film of a young woman seated amid a field of colorful flowers shaped like hearts
a gif from a short animated film of a young woman seated by a bright fire
a still from an animated film of a young woman seated in the foreground of a huge figure, stuck in the ground, who sits pensively behind her

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