A view from above

18 MINUTES

We soar, we plunge, we labour: here is all peak human experience

An astronaut is launched into orbit, his body tightly confined inside his suit and vessel, his mind enraptured by his new perspective on Earth. A boxer pumps himself up before a big match, repeating the mantra ‘you can’t change destiny’ before plunging into the controlled chaos of a fight. Two young men roll a joint, smoke it and lay down in a euphoric daze. Preparing for the birth of her child at hospital, a woman enters the painful throes of labour with her partner by her side. A man approaches a diving platform, peers over the edge to take in the height and plunges into the swimming pool.

These are the disparate narrative threads that the Dutch filmmaker Dylan Werkman weaves in his ambitious short film A View from Above, tethering these scenes together with craft and care to form a single, sprawling story. The rattling and beeping sounds of a spacecraft entering orbit bleed into a boxer in the heat of combat. Edits juxtapose the man’s walk up to the high dive with the astronaut’s journey to the space shuttle. Each strand shares a cinematic shot-on-film aesthetic and contemplative pace. While depicting these extremes of human experience, Werkman draws out elements that unite all of humanity – views of the Earth, the sounds of breathing and heartbeats, the experience of birth – evoking human life as an inevitably shared endeavour.

That Werkman, who created A View from Above while studying at the Netherlands Film Academy, isn’t overmatched by his stratospheric ambitions is an impressive feat. Meditations on the wondrous smallness of the Earth when viewed from space is well-tread filmic territory. But immersing the viewer in the shakiness of the space capsule and, ultimately, the parachute ride back down to Earth, he brings these scenes a true sense of intimacy and tension, and, upon entering orbit, breathtaking serenity. Through this, and from the many small glimpses into of terrestrial life below, emerges a bold and poetic exploration of peak human experience and ascendence.

Written by Adam D’Arpino

Director: Dylan Werkman

Producers: Marrit Greidanus, Pieter Kapteijns

Cinematographer: Jaap Mar Diemel

Explore more

Illustration of a scoreboard at Barclays Center showing a man with raised arms, surrounded by an arena.

A dancing NBA superfan on the joy of spaces that let us go wild and get weird

Directed by Mickey Duzyj

Four people swimming in a lake surrounded by foggy hills under a cloudy sky.

How to take the plunge – from cold showers to icy swims

There’s growing evidence for the psychological and health benefits of cold-water immersion. Here’s how to get started

by Jenny Favell

Marble statue of a sleeping man with curly hair lying on fabric, arm draped over his head.

The ancients dreamt the same dreams as us

There is something comforting about realising that, even in Homer’s day, people wondered what the hell their dreams meant

by Sam Dresser

Photo of a bee on a vibrant orange flower with a blurred background, highlighting the intricate flower details.

Psychedelics are philosophical tools for demolishing assumptions

By shaking up our sense of how things are, substances like LSD or psilocybin have the potential to promote deep learning

by David J Blacker

Photo of a person silhouetted against the Milky Way galaxy in a starry night sky, with a faint horizon glow.

The ‘panzoic effect’: the benefits of thinking about alien life

Reflecting on the potential for extraterrestrial life can inspire awe and have a profound effect on your worldview

by Graham Lau

A waterfall under a stormy sky with mist and a building on the left cliff surrounded by trees in the background.

How to think about the sublime

An exquisite mix of fear and awe, pleasure and pain, the sublime stretches the imagination and reveals the limits of reason

by Nicole A Hall

A cheerful picnic by a river with adults and children relaxing on blankets under a blue sky with scattered clouds.

For a happier life, we must balance two old psychological needs

Personal autonomy is abundant in the modern world. As a result, many of us get what we want but not what we need

by William von Hippel

Desert with a blurred yellow road sign and distant hills under a blue sky.
Psyche Exclusive

Ride along on a road trip suffused with LSD, petty theft and true love

Directed by Aric Allen