On man, this is going to be a hard one, and I planned to do five novels you can use as an advent novel. The idea is to open a chapter every day and read it, and by the 25th, you’ll have read a whole book. Books have nothing to do with this post, but I wanted to show you, as the writer, how wide the human thought process can be. In a way, I’m trying to soften the blow of my views as a viewer of this short film. I’m talking about All the Empty Rooms, which was recently added to Netflix.
All the Empty Rooms starts with a reporter, Steve Hartman, whose stories are typically the feel-good stories to end on a good note. He decided to call his friend documentarian Joshua Seftel. With the words, I’m doing a story about the empty bedrooms of children who’ve been killed in school shootings, and I wonder if there might be a documentary film in all of this.” This was the birth of this project. Something that touched me was Joshua Seftel, who has a morning routine with his daughter to capture a daily photo, while in a few minutes he will go to families who can’t do that with theirs.
They all lost their kids to the hands of a school shooter, someone they had never seen before, who will be the last one they will ever see in this world or worse, a classmate with whom they shared emotions and thoughts. We view the stories of children who left the physical world way too soon, in a place where they should have been safe, in a place where they should have been guided to their dreams. In the end, each family is given a photo album, with the bedroom of their child left in a timeless state to tell the story. In an article which came out last month, there were 159 school shootings in the USA alone.
OMG Thank you for this…everyone needs to see this video. America is on her knees and the killing will never stop. Never.
LikeLike
I agree even as non-American
LikeLike