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Jennifer, Where Are You?

1981 · 11 min
7.0 / 10 · TMDB

Jennifer, Where Are You? is structured by a speech-act, a constant proleptic call, a man’s voice which has been edited and recut into a repetitive and pervasive presence. The insistence of this male voice, which repeats the phrase “Jennifer! Where are you?” every 30 seconds, parodies the authority conceded to voice-overs in the cinema. The voice is patriarchal, relentless, and runs the entire length of the film. Cut-aways to a small girl, glancing at the camera as she plays with lipstick and matches, reapportion the relation between patriarchal phonocentrism and masculine gaze. But is this small child subject to either? No. Not really. There she is, hiding in plain sight–ours, not ‘his’–a ‘purloined subject’ successfully evading subjugation through response or acquiescence. ‘Jennifer,’ whoever she might be (a cipher, a pseudonymous textual marker of gendered cinematic presence) is never apprehended, and the film, for all of its suspense, simply ends.

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📋 Film Details

Year 1981
Country United States of America
Director Leslie Thornton
Runtime 11 min.
Rating TMDB: 7.0/10 (1 votes)

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🎬 MovieFinder's Take

The film constructs a rigorous conceptual framework, relying on the obsessive repetition of a single phrase to parody and dismantle the authority of the cinematic voice-over. It explores the mechanisms of patriarchal control through sound, juxtaposed against the silent, self-contained world of a child at play.

What lingers after viewing is a potent sense of resistance rooted not in defiance, but in a simple, radical act of non-response. Those who tire of conventional narrative will find a compelling study of a subject purloined from subjugation. — MovieFinder Editorial

Director: Leslie Thornton

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Watch in focused silence to fully absorb the tension between sound and image.

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