Short of the Week

Play
Drama Ian Mackinnon

Adjustment

Love inspires, but the fear of losing love causes an animator to obsessively record the moments he and his love share. An innovative mix of live-action and flipbook animation.

Play
Drama Ian Mackinnon

Adjustment

Love inspires, but the fear of losing love causes an animator to obsessively record the moments he and his love share. An innovative mix of live-action and flipbook animation.

Adjustment

Drama about Loss in Animation
Directed By Ian Mackinnon
Made In UK

In Ian Mackinnon’s words, flip books work because of persistence of vision—we continue to see something after it has actually gone. Ian’s movie, Adjustment, traces the break-down in the relationship between Alice (Sally Scott) and Rob (Matthew Lyon), an artist whose relationship with the woman allows him to write again. However in a burst of creativity that becomes obsessive, he records their every moment together in a series of flip books and photographs. There, in flickering images, are their first meeting, first meal, their romance. As his grip on reality recedes, the act of recording becomes increasingly desperate and accelerates their decline.

The film moves effortlessly between passages of time, tracing the break-down of the relationship precipitated by and relived through an obsessive requirement to record events the two have shared. The greater Rob’s fear of losing her the more desperate is he to preserve Alice’s image.

The narrative is presented in flip book animation and live action. Narrated by Rob (Simon Perry) we watch as Alice attempts to wrestle him back to reality. “Can you just STOP for one minute to talk about this?” she writes. I can scarcely conceive of a form of flip book ignored in this classy film: conventional, hand machine operated, toilet tissue unravelled, images discarded on the floor, cascading in the air, even, at one stage, pasted to the London Underground wall behind Alice as she sits alone with the possessions removed from their apartment.

If the use of animation is extraordinary, the filming is subtle with a curiously detached quality about it. Many of the shots of Alice are full on portraits, reflecting her partner’s obsessive need to record their relationship. The walls of the apartment itself are white and at times it is as if the director has drained much of the colour from the action so that it echoes the flickering white paper of the flip books. Technically and artistically accomplished, Adjustment is beautifully edited, cutting from past to present almost as if the photographs and drawn images are shuffled into a different order, as indeed they are in the film.

The movie formed part of Ian’s graduation from the Royal College of Art in 2006. He also studied and taught Computer Animation at Bournemouth University. He is one of the UK’s young directors with huge potential.