Short Film — Sekunder 2009
Tonally, Sekunder skirts melancholy without succumbing to it. There is an elegiac quality—an awareness of loss or missed connection—but it’s tempered by quiet humor and a humane curiosity. The film isn’t a sermon about regret; it’s an observation of how people patch together ordinary existence in spite of the small failures that pepper it. The ending resists a tidy resolution, which is fitting: life doesn’t tie itself up, and the film’s refusal to force closure feels honest rather than evasive.