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This dystopian nightmare though has nothing to do with Covid-19, instead it is Neural Inflammatory Affliction (NIA) sweeping the globe. If contracted, it can mean a pilot suddenly can’t remember how to fly, a marathon runner forgets to stop running, or the sufferer wandering the streets aimlessly because they’ve forgotten where they live. Even more disturbing, for some people, it happens all at once, while others just gradually fade away. And there’s currently no cure. Vet tech Emma has experienced first-hand people who used greet her warmly now presenting blank-faced, while she worries about her ageing mother’s ability to get her husband’s name right. Then there’s Jude (Jack O’Connell) himself, a man who once “always had a camera in his hand and a photograph in his mind”. Recently, Emma has kept him under constant watch, looking for NIA symptoms, trying to keep his brain sharp with teasers and puzzles and fearing that – one day – she might wake up and ....
Wed 5 May 2021 12.00 EDT Once you get past its note of emo-mawkishness, thereâs something disquieting and poignant (and rather prescient) about this doomed love story of the future, from director Chad Hartigan and taken from a short story by LA author Aja Gabel. Emma (Olivia Cooke) and Jude (Jack OâConnell) are a young couple living in an America ravaged by a pandemic causing memory loss. The disease has been causing planes to crash, because pilots suddenly forget how to fly, and marathon competitors to keep on running into the night because theyâve forgotten theyâre supposed to stop. The coupleâs best friends have been hit by the disease, and Emma and Jude are now themselves anxiously monitoring each other for the first signs of forgetfulness, and trying to hoard their romantic memories (so recently made) against the great forthcoming oblivion. ....
Ask a Book Critic: Books for a quarterlife crisis Our critic recommends books to suit your very specific mood. Share this story Welcome to the latest installment of Vox’s Ask a Book Critic, in which I, Vox book critic Constance Grady, provide book recommendations to suit your very specific mood: either how you’re feeling right now or how you’d like to be feeling instead. If you prefer your recommendations in audio form, you can listen to Ask a Book Critic always under 10 minutes long every two weeks wherever you listen to podcasts, including Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, and Spotify. ....
Anytime a film is set in a specific place, such as how yours is in Seattle, there will be people who will look at the film closely to see how much it captures the place they hold close to their heart and that is a lot of what the film is about too, is losing places that are close to you. How much of this film did you actually film in Seattle? Yeah, not very much at all actually. [Laughs.] We shot most of it in Vancouver. But we did like one week in Seattle. I tried to do as much of the exterior, more noticeable work there but still, like I didn t want to just point the camera at the Space Needle and be like, see, we re in Seattle. With locations in general, I feel like they re the most under-appreciated tool in an indie filmmaker s toolkit to making the film feel bigger than it probably really is. And so especially with something like this that was going to have a lot of locations, we really concentrated on making sure each one felt really unique to the rest of the locations ....