Connect with us

Film

Daniel Cockburn’s You Are Here is Compulsively Watchable and Utterly Unique

David Cockburn's You Are Here 2011 Film Review
Image: Pacific Northwest Pictures

10 Years Later: Revisiting You Are Here

Equal parts video essay, fragmented “thought experiment,” and social satire, Daniel Cockburn’s You Are Here is one of the most audacious English Canadian features to come down the pike in years. Imbued with enough dry wit and obscure observations to fill a dozen Charlie Kaufman treatments, the film dares to invent a cinematic language at least partially its very own in a scant 78 minutes.

Equal parts Library of Babel and errant-psychology portraiture (akin to the subjects of Errol Morris’s First Person), You Are Here contains few concrete characters – only a couple of figures recur. The film’s opening sequence is of a lecture – though it is never made clear if there is actually an audience present, besides the viewer(s) themselves. Projected behind the lecturer is a tranquil video of ocean waves overlapping each other. The lecturer proceeds to quiz the audience on how they are viewing the waves, then proceeds to use a laser pointer to highlight certain types of motion. Then, he implores the audience to do the impossible: develop an awareness of the red dot’s position…without consciously following it.

The scene works as the closest thing to a summation Cockburn’s film can easily support; it’s a series of interconnected impossibilities, carefully conceived by a set of obsessive figures, whether they manifest as a crowd – the film refers to most of its characters simply as “Alan” – or as individuals. A protagonist of sorts emerges midway through the film: the archivist, played by Tracy Wright in one of her last roles, a somewhat tragic figure who collects bizarre detritus and attempts to make it all fit into some grand configuration she has no actual concept of. It’s just one iteration of the man-as-machine depicted throughout the film in various forms, from the semi-computerized man described in a child’s elaborate fable to the social scientist who unknowingly invents a mind-debilitating linguistic experiment and then volunteers to be the first test subject.

Cockburn’s central concern seems to be of the dangers of a life too closely examined, as compared to those of a life not examined at all. The latter is manifested in a mathematically orchestrated sequence in which four “trackers” (perhaps better described as “human traffic controllers”) occupy a cluttered office one by one, then proceed to coordinate the direction and travel distance of any number of Alans through archaic cell phones. These people are the opposite of the archivist – directionless unless directed, and without clear occupation, they exist simply as other people’s busy work.

That’s enough information. You Are Here, for all its experimental flourishes, bizarre digressions, and total disregard for straightforward continuity, is never remotely boring, trafficking as it does in new ideas, obscure visual gags, and maddening logic puzzles throughout its compressed runtime. Utterly unique and totally engrossing, You Are Here deserves to find an audience of any kind, as it can easily inspire a small legion of new filmmakers with its no-budget marvels and clarity of vision.

Simon Howell

Now Streaming

Written By

Simon is a sometimes writer and podcaster living in Toronto.

Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Facebook

Trending

Taylor Swift Enjoys a Rare Family Outing with Her Parents and Brother Austin in NYC

Celebrity

Jessie​‍​‌‍​‍‌​‍​‌‍​‍‌ James Decker Intends to Get Smaller Breast ​‍​‌‍​‍‌​‍​‌‍​‍‌Implants

Celebrity

Nick Lachey Shares an In-Flight Encounter with Jessica Simpson 20 Years after Their Divorce

Celebrity

Hayden Panettiere says Hollywood Oscar winner flashed himself at her at a party

Celebrity

Dustin Hoffman Reflects on His Rise to Stardom and Shares Advice for Young Actors

Celebrity

Jaclyn Smith Shares the Surprising Reason She Still Looks So Young at 80, and Fans Loved It.

Celebrity

Akon Says Having Multiple Wives Is Natural

Celebrity

Sonny Rollins, the ‘Saxophone Colossus’ of Jazz, Passes Away at 95

Celebrity

Cher at 80: The Bloodlines, Bonds, and Beats That Shape an Icon

Culture

Khloé Kardashian Invests in Phoebe Gates’ Fast-Growing App

Celebrity

Morgan Wallen Comments on “Nonsense” Rumors Regarding His Concert Cancellation After Onstage Outburst

Celebrity

Rich Paul Opens Up About Meeting Adele — and How They Went From “Cordial” to Couple

Celebrity

Jack Schlossberg recently shared his thoughts on Madonnas comments about his father, JFK Jr.

Celebrity

Pierre Deny, known for his role in Emily in Paris, has passed away at 69 following a sudden and severe struggle with ALS.

Celebrity

Danniella Westbrook shares new photograph of her face before getting her lip fixed surgically

Celebrity

Kelly Lee, the older sister of Jamie Lee Curtis, has passed away at the age of 69: “She is at peace.”

Celebrity

Connect