By Will Hite
Most people’s early childhood memories may have consisted of going outside, running around, and interacting with other children of the same age group. However, when COVID-19 struck the globe and put everyone under lockdown in March 2020, the nuances of ‘growing up’ were stripped from the children of this generation. The short film, No More Screen Time (now screening on the Planet Classroom Network YouTube Channel), provides an assertive statement that as effective as online learning can be in the given circumstances of a pandemic, children cannot be forced to stare at a screen one second longer and risk missing out on the joys of being a kid.
The film opens up on a child wearing what appears to be 3-D glasses one would wear in a movie theater even though the content on screen, which appears colorful and fast moving, causes the child to grow bored and sleepy. One could connect these glasses with the blue vision glasses that many students of all ages began wearing after receiving eye strain and headaches from online classes. A non-diegetic humming sound can be heard throughout the opening as well as the next scene, in which the viewer sees an over-the-shoulder horizontal tracking shot behind a young girl sitting down at a desk watching the children run around and play on the screen. The camera turns here and there to demonstrate the fatigue in her eyes.
The film ends with the girl gazing outside the window and seeing the children playing, smiling, and deciding to venture outside. The images being presented on screen have become a reality and the filmmaker brilliantly juxtaposes the two mise-en-scènes of the eerie online learning environment to a colorful, rapidly changing world outside the confines of the online classroom. However, one could suspect that the final scene merely happens to be inside the girl’s imagination, serving as a promise for what will come when society returns to normalcy.
The editing, cinematography, and sound design of the film were well-executed, and the filmmaker has a unique vision about a pressing issue. To be honest, I did not fully grasp the film’s connection to the education dilemma society faces at this point in time. Therefore, I would give the film a 3.5/5, noting that the filmmaker should include more shots of the children’s faces because they are the subject as well as perhaps one or two images of educational content being shown on the screen because those are the images being thrust upon the young minds in reality.
Will Hite is a senior at Connecticut College pursuing a degree in theater and film studies. His area of focus includes playwriting and screenwriting, acting, directing, video editing, and dramaturgy. Will has been an avid member of the student run theater scene at his college, helping organizing play readings for Wig and Candle as well as founding a playwriting club called Crooked Curtains Theater.
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