Time Indefinite

Time Indefinite is an autobiographical 1993 documentary film directed by Ross McElwee and exploring themes of grief, mortality, and the convenient disconnection of watching life through a camera lens. The title comes from a passage from the Bible mentioned by a visiting Jehovah's Witness. McElwee is filming the interaction and focused on adjusting the exposure to try to catch the play of light over the man's face; distracted, he "hears" the phrase about 30 seconds after the man says it and understands it to refer to the unpredictable imminence of death.

Plot

In the film, director Ross McElwee gets married, finally putting an end to his family's worrying; his grandmother dies; his wife Marilyn has a miscarriage; and his father, a medical doctor, dies suddenly within a week of McElwee's wife's miscarriage. His mother had died of cancer ten years earlier and so McElwee returns to his father's house, where his father's housekeeper ministers to him about Christianity and faith. McElwee goes to visit his friend Charleen, who is now living alone in a new apartment. She had lived on an island in an old two-story house abandoned by the U.S. Army; she and her husband worked to restore it and lived together there for years before becoming estranged. Charleen then lived there alone, but on returning home from a trip she finds that her husband has set fire to the house and died downstairs at the grand piano in an arson/suicide. Charleen has her husband's cremated remains in a bag inside a box and tries to get rid of them but can't bring herself to do it. McElwee's brother is a successful doctor; on a visit to his brother's practice, Ross talks with his brother about their father's death, which took them both by surprise. Ross's brother receives a patient who has a large malignant tumor on her breast; the woman has had the tumor for years without seeking medical help. Ross's brother takes a slide of the tumor for his files; it has spread across much of her chest and is both multifaceted and multicolored. Ross incorporates his brother's interview with the woman--and the slide his brother takes--into his film, musing in voiceover about motivation and fatality and marvelling at the power of denial. Eventually Ross abandons the film, only to continue it later: his wife is pregnant. The pregnancy comes to term and Ross and Marilyn go with their baby son to visit Charleen, who criticizes them for bringing children into such a hostile and unpredictable world. Ross and Marilyn dote on their son and seem largely unbothered by the criticism.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
eurovision song contest 1981
eurovision song contest 1980
eurovision song contest 1979
fret
frederick marryat
skeptical inquirer
reanimation
advertising slogan
meteora (album)
quantum decoherence
harmony toolkit
skrewdriver
jazz scales
sami al arian
metalloprotein
ludobot
national foundation for educational research
nfernelson
the office
norma (constellation)
cyclopean
norma
national academy of engineering
ross mcelwee
crucible
nellie bly
rhein sieg
origins international game expo
talisman the adventure
midland main line
herbert asquith
undercover journalism
silly philly
ingrid betancourt
the part and the whole
arnold murray
socialist labour party
impulse tracker
screamtracker
perseus project
macast
jura mountains
end times
benztropine