Reimagining an Irish City: I am Belfast
An early shot in Mark Cousin's I am Belfast lingers on a very unusual and unexpected landscape, what appears to be an icy vista reflected in water, with clouds drifting by in the distance. Where s this our narrator asks. Are we at the North Pole? Or in the clouds? Or on an ice planet? As the sh...
Published in: | Estudios Irlandeses |
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Format: | Article in Journal/Newspaper |
Language: | English |
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Asociación Española de Estudios Irlandeses, Spanish Association for Irish Studies (AEDEI)
2017
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Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/10379/6584 https://doi.org/10.24162/EI |
Summary: | An early shot in Mark Cousin's I am Belfast lingers on a very unusual and unexpected landscape, what appears to be an icy vista reflected in water, with clouds drifting by in the distance. Where s this our narrator asks. Are we at the North Pole? Or in the clouds? Or on an ice planet? As the shot widens, it reveals a Belfast landmark, Shore Road Mill, hiding behind a hill of salt. From the beginning, Cousins film is concerned to provide a different vision of Belfast, to encourage the viewer to look anew at the familiar, or (to the non-local) to familiarise ourselves with the extraordinary richness of place, space and people in this much misrepresented Irish city. peer-reviewed |
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