Movie Review: LUCY (2016)

  MOVIE POSTERLUCY, 16min, Greece, Family/Drama
Directed by Stamatis Giannoulis

Myrto and Kimonas, an elderly childless couple have just lost their pet dog Lucy of natural causes. The events that will unfold the day they take their beloved pet to the vet will make them reconsider their relations and give them the opportunity to realise that nothing can substitute their love which, they now put to the test for whatever they have left…

Seen at the August 2016 FAMILY FEEDBACK Film Festival in Toronto.

Movie Review by Kierston Drier

This story of a childless elderly couple who loses their family pet may seem like a simple concept, but the beauty in this piece is how much more in communicates than losing the family dog. From writer and director pair Stamatis and Alex Giannoulis, Lucy begins with our elderly couple discussing taking the pet into the vet.

The conversation seems tense, as though the couple have a history of not seeing eye-to-eye. Yet the husband rushes to his wife’s’ side when she breaks down over the animal. Of course, the pet has passed away, and it marks far more to the two of them than simply losing an animal.

Later, as the couple walks home, they pass a puppy in a local shop window, which bewitches the heart of the elderly woman. Good short films leave the audience with a sense that they are feeling something deeper, greater and larger than the sum of the films’ parts. In this case, the last scene in Lucy ties everything together, when we realize the couple’s’ pet of 18 years represented the children they could never conceive.

This animal was the focus in their lives and belonged to the world they built together. Lucy may take some viewers a little while to get into, but it is more than a story about losing a pet- it is a story about the capacity human beings have to love. A beautiful piece about the human heart and what keeps it beating.

Watch the Audience FEEDBACK Video of the short film:

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