Felin taps into her past work in the documentary field, infusing the realities of modern-day Haiti with a lyrical touch. And as her characters begin to heal, Felin suggests that the island will too. Instead, she places the island's narrative back in the hands of Haitians whose lives aren't reducible to headlines. While the pain of the destruction remains evident - in young Orphée's grief over the loss of his father, in the rubble of decimated buildings, in ghostly images that float beneath the ocean's surface - Felin refuses to tell a tale of victimhood. Set five years after the devastating 2010 earthquake, Felin's film eschews the images that saturated screens after the disaster. In Guetty Felin's magical neorealist tale, these three stories combine to create a poetic portrait of the island nation Haiti. A muse struggles to exit the story her author is penning. An old fisherman realizes the cure for his ailing wife can be found in the sea. A grieving young boy discovers he has a superpower.
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