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Scott Barley's 2017 experimental film has inspired several deep-dive blog posts and essays that focus on its "terrible sublime" nature and its production on an iPhone 6. Recommended Blog Posts & Essays
: A fascinating exploration that reinterprets the film as "science fiction," viewing it as a portrait of an Earth undergoing a slow, persistent decay into permanent nightfall. Sleep Has Her House
: The "climax" of the film involves a deafening storm sequence that uses sound and stroboscopic light to create a sensory "apocalypse". Scott Barley's 2017 experimental film has inspired several
: This piece compares Barley’s work to the landscape philosophies of John Ruskin, explaining how the film distills nature into a "visual and aural language of the apocalypse". : This piece compares Barley’s work to the
Interview: Scott Barley on Sleep Has Her House - floating world
: This review analyzes the film's "grim excursion into the great Unknown," highlighting how the absence of humans makes nature’s soul appear simultaneously terrifying and tranquil. Key Facts About the Film