Q: WHAT DOES A QUIET DAY LOOK LIKE FOR YOU?
A: A quiet day usually involves slow and attentive activities: making sourdough bread, preparing tea in the gong fu tradition, walking in the mountains, or working with analogue photography. These moments have a very different pace from wedding days, but they share something important with filmmaking — patience, observation, and attention to small details that gradually reveal themselves.
Q: WHAT HAPPENS ON THE WEDDING DAY?
A: I try to move through the day quietly and attentively, observing rather than leading and allowing situations to unfold naturally. During small pauses I often talk with guests, listen to conversations, or simply watch how people interact. These details help me understand the relationships around you, which later shape the structure of the film.
Q: HOW LONG ARE THE FILMS YOU CREATE?
A: Most films are between 5 and 20 minutes long. I believe this length holds the right balance between emotional intensity and narrative rhythm. When films become much longer they often lose the focus and energy that make them compelling to revisit.
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