From the daily archives:

Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Second Sight

Second Sight (2008, Director: Alison McAlpine): Through the wit and charm of near-80 Donald Angus MacLean, film­maker Alison McAlpine explores the oral tra­di­tion in northern Scotland on the Isle of Skye. Donald “Angie” is quite a char­acter, an enter­taining rogue with an eye for the ladies and an ear for a good story. A former preacher, Donald drives around the town in his red car (his name written across the trunk), his dog in the pas­senger seat, vis­iting a few of the island’s even more enter­taining char­ac­ters. These res­id­ents reveal their stories of pre­mon­i­tions, spectres and ghost cars. Their ability to see what is unseen, known as second sight, is set against the hills, moors and mist that make up the island. However, these are not simply ghost stories—at least, that’s what the res­id­ents would have you believe. They tell their tales in earnest, retelling them as if what they wit­nessed happened only hours earlier. McAlpine cer­tainly cap­tures the overall eeri­ness of the sub­ject while at the same time framing the beau­tiful land­scape that is Scotland north. With a few laughs along the way, Second Sight will make you think twice about the things you cannot see.

Official site of the film

9/10(9/10)

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