I, The Eyes (flim): Difference between revisions
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Henri is terrible at batting but his pitching catches the eye of the team's coach. After a rough start where he almost gives up, he discovers he has a talent for throwing {{wp|curveball|curveballs}}. With the support of his teammates he begins to gain mastery of the game, but he is still haunted by his experiences. In one of the games with a local team, he encounters Alex Dogo, a formidable batter who is able to get many hits off him, much to Herni's chagrin. Finally Henri is able to strike him out swinging and even though the team loses the game, it is a personal victory for him. After the game, Alex approaches him they both complement each other on their athletic ability and gain a mutual respect. The flashback ends when one of the customers interrupts the old man to buy the man a drink, he accepts it and continues the story. | Henri is terrible at batting but his pitching catches the eye of the team's coach. After a rough start where he almost gives up, he discovers he has a talent for throwing {{wp|curveball|curveballs}}. With the support of his teammates he begins to gain mastery of the game, but he is still haunted by his experiences. In one of the games with a local team, he encounters Alex Dogo, a formidable batter who is able to get many hits off him, much to Herni's chagrin. Finally Henri is able to strike him out swinging and even though the team loses the game, it is a personal victory for him. After the game, Alex approaches him they both complement each other on their athletic ability and gain a mutual respect. The flashback ends when one of the customers interrupts the old man to buy the man a drink, he accepts it and continues the story. | ||
The scene transitions to a Stars game in 1939. The baseball team are wearing formal uniforms | The scene transitions to a Stars game in 1939. The baseball team are now wearing formal uniforms and look much more professional, but there is an unspoken tension in the air. It is revealed that there is a line of police officers separating a sparse crowd from the field. | ||
1943 | 1943 |
Revision as of 07:11, 9 October 2022
Mo Lizie la | |
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Directed by | Jo Noe |
Screenplay by | Janie Dogo Samson Perreault |
Produced by | Jamie Madani |
Starring |
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Cinematography | Bojan Domota |
Edited by | Janie Dogo |
Release dates |
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Running time | 110 minutes |
Country | Carucere |
Languages | Papotement Gaullican |
Budget | $3 million |
I, The Eyes (Papotement: Mo Lizie la, Gaullican: Moi, les Yeux) is a Carucerean historical drama and independent film produced and released in 2022. It the first film written and directed by Janie Dogo and Samson Perreault and shot entirely within Carucere on a limited budget. The movie tells the history of the Carrefour Stars baseball team from 1935 to 1947 as told from the perspective of a personification of the baseball team itself. The movie's title is a reference to the team's nickname due to the team's logo resembling an eye. The film is set to premiere at the 83rd Montecara Film Festival on 22 October 2022, and is set for a regional theatrical release the day after.
Plot
In 2011, at the celebrations following the Carrefour Stars win at the year's Arucian Series, a mysterious old man recollects his memories of the baseball team to revelers sitting at the bar with him. In 1935 an young Gosan man named Henri Dugo returns home to his family after the end of the Great War. While he only briefly saw combat when the island was seized by Estmere, he was traumatized when his position was targeted by Estmerish shore bombardment for several hours. He begins to fall into a depression until a chance encounter with a foul ball leads him to try out for the newly reformed Carrefour Stars baseball club.
Henri is terrible at batting but his pitching catches the eye of the team's coach. After a rough start where he almost gives up, he discovers he has a talent for throwing curveballs. With the support of his teammates he begins to gain mastery of the game, but he is still haunted by his experiences. In one of the games with a local team, he encounters Alex Dogo, a formidable batter who is able to get many hits off him, much to Herni's chagrin. Finally Henri is able to strike him out swinging and even though the team loses the game, it is a personal victory for him. After the game, Alex approaches him they both complement each other on their athletic ability and gain a mutual respect. The flashback ends when one of the customers interrupts the old man to buy the man a drink, he accepts it and continues the story.
The scene transitions to a Stars game in 1939. The baseball team are now wearing formal uniforms and look much more professional, but there is an unspoken tension in the air. It is revealed that there is a line of police officers separating a sparse crowd from the field.
1943
1947