The hangman at home

14 MINUTES

The unseen lives of others take centre stage in this surreal poetry adaptation

… If the little
Ones say, Daddy, play horse, here’s
A rope – does he answer like a joke:
I seen enough rope for today?

In his poem The Hangman at Home (1922), the US poet Carl Sandburg ponders the life of the titular hangman, asking a series of questions that juxtapose the violence of his work with his quaint home life. This adaptation from Michelle Kranot and Uri Kranot, a husband-and-wife filmmaking team originally from Israel and now based in Denmark, pairs Sandburg’s words with five animated fragments, each of them unfolding in a single room amid intimate, private moments. In one scene, a man calmly steps through what appears to be his bombed-out home, with the sounds of air raid sirens eventually blaring in the background. In another, a man tends to a bedridden loved one who seems to be near death. Yet another scene mirrors a line from the poem in which one of the hangman’s children asks him to ‘play horse’.

The work rewards the viewer’s patience as it slowly tugs at Sandburg’s words. Over the film’s duration, these scenes, which are at first opaque, coalesce into a commentary on the mysteries humans so often are to one another, and the disparate, sometimes contradictory, roles we play. The experience is at once transfixing and confronting. In some moments, these uncanny animated figures stare directly towards the audience, appearing to be aware of our intrusions into their worlds. The resulting tension seems to acknowledge the strength of the walls between our public and private selves, and the discomfort that arises when these boundaries are broken.

Directors: Michelle Kranot, Uri Kranot

Websites: Tin Drum, National Film Board of Canada

Explore more

Photo of a woman floating on their back in water with sunlight on their face and blurred foliage in the background.

Emotions aren’t reactions – they’re predictions we can learn to reshape

Video by The Well

Photo of a hand using a black marker to redact text on paper several words are boxed to be emphasised.
POETRY

Reignite your creative fire with blackout poetry – the art of framing what’s already there

Directed by Andrew Lavers

Photo of a person speaking into a microphone holding an electric string instrument with a choir in the background.

The barbarians are at the gates in this electric Laurie Anderson performance

Video by All Arts

Abstract illustration of a person with eyes closed, wearing glasses, surrounded by cosmic elements on a blue and black background.
POETRY

Enter a dreamy French surrealist poem, where love and reality never quite touch

Directed by Emma Vakarelova

Two people sitting on a bench next to a marina with several boats in the background, partially covered by tree branches.

Young, gay and Arab, Omar navigates the seasons of his life in Montreal

Directed by Aziz Zoromba

Illustration of a person with curly hair, wearing large glasses and a sleeveless top, looking back over their shoulder.
LOVE

Surreal vignettes form a meditation on love in this Oscar-winning short

Directed by Alberto Mielgo

Monichrome drawing of a bearded man with a hat, holding a pole, facing a striped lighthouse on an island, both reflected on a calm body of water.
POETRY

Sail through Shakespeare’s melancholic soliloquy on life’s seven stages

Directed by Jérémie Balais and Jeffig Le Bars

A man recently released from prison standing on a rock by a tranquil lake, surrounded by dense green trees and under a partly cloudy sky.

After decades in prison, Jack navigates the strange, beautiful outside world

Directed by Pete Quandt