The Snell Show
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''The Snell Show'' is a short film by
Scottish Scottish usually refers to something of, from, or related to Scotland, including: *Scottish Gaelic, a Celtic Goidelic language of the Indo-European language family native to Scotland *Scottish English *Scottish national identity, the Scottish ide ...
-born director, Andrew Black. The film is a black comedy featuring a nuclear explosion at a family get-together. The film has multiple levels of meaning. It can be taken as a straightforward satire on nuclear weapons and the Cold War or a commentary on how commonplace and mundane technology has become in our lives. Says director Black: "Both of these were in my mind as I wrote the screenplay — and then 9/11 happened. The world was inundated with visions of collapsing skyscrapers and burning wreckage — and we couldn’t stop watching. For me, the film became more about our fascination with violence and how it is frequently presented as a form of spectacle and entertainment through the media." Author of the short story, Darl Larsen, adds: "The genre that might be called "nuclear fiction" has always fascinated me, especially the often-banal way we tend to treat the most destructive force in our possession and ''The Snell Show'' seemed a fitting tribute to such ambivalence". After winning the Grand Jury Prize at the 2003 Slamdance Film Festival, ''The Snell Show'' went on to play many festivals across the nation, including the HBO US Comedy Arts Festival, Maryland Film Festival, AFI Film Festival, and
Finger Lakes Environmental Film Festival Finger Lakes Environmental Film Festival (FLEFF) is an annual multi-arts, interdisciplinary, cross media festival in Ithaca, New York, dedicated to showcasing global media projects focusing on issues pertaining to sustainability. History The Fin ...
.


References


"Two Y film students win top prize at Slamdance"
''BYU NewsNet''. Accessed on 27 January 2003.
"Interview with director Andrew Black"
''eFilmCritic''. Interview conducted 3 January 2003


External links

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British short films 2000s English-language films 2000s British films {{short-film-stub