‘All Light, Everywhere’ Review: The Corruption of the Camera
This review originally ran on Feb 1, 2021 during the Sundance Film Festival. In his latest documentary, All Light, Everywhere, […]
This review originally ran on Feb 1, 2021 during the Sundance Film Festival.
In his latest documentary, All Light, Everywhere, experimental filmmaker Theo Anthony (Rat Film) de-mystifies our good faith in modern technology as he puts an artfully-abstract lens on a hot button social issue that is currently plaguing our communities. In a somewhat meta sense, Anthony dissects the creation and purpose of the camera, coming face to face with its historical uses and, in his eyes, modern-day hidden abuses.
Comprised of a wide-ranging collection of stories that span from the advent of the camera, up to its present-day uses within police forces and private agencies, All Light, Everywhere aims to expose the inherent corruption of the camera by way of its subjective photographer. Anthony transports us all the way back to the 19th century at the advent of astronomical stargazing, up through 1918, observing the silent soldiers of WWI: the actual pigeons that were trained to photograph behind enemy lines during wartime.
While all fascinating history lessons, most of the film stays in the present to focus on Axon, a company with a near-monopoly on body cameras and tasers in the United States. As we tour the Axon facility, we’re given a behind the scenes look at not only how police body cameras and tasers are made, but the ethical problems inherently attached, which have the potential to create life or death situations for those at the center of the lens.
For as much substance as All Light, Everywhere emits, it’s also equally as stylish. The dark subject matter is easily digestible by Anthony, who breaks the 4th wall during filming to innocently poke fun at his main interview subject (Axon spokesman Steve Tuttle) and posing interesting rhetorical questions (brought to life by voiceover artist Keaver Brenai). “Every image has a frame, and every frame has a world that’s excluded beyond its edges,” is just one of the quotable one-liners here. My personal favorite was the follow-up statement: “When we understand something, we say ‘I See,’ even though we don’t.”
In All Light, Everywhere, not all technology is seen as evil; the fact that it can help us overcome the limitations of our human potential is a significant counter reason. Set against a dreamy, high-tech score from composer Dan Deacon, All Light, Everywhere is an eye-opening experience that leaves us questioning how we can trust the hands that this technology falls into.
Distributed by Super LTD, All Light, Everywhere is now playing in select NY and LA theaters.
Morgan Rojas
Certified fresh. For disclosure purposes, Morgan currently runs PR at PRETTYBIRD and Ventureland.