Still Wylde - A Film Analysis by Appleton Desmond Essel



 Still Wylde - A Quiet Space Between Who You Were and Who You're Becoming

Genre: Drama.
Directed by:
 
Ingrid Haas.

Written by: Ingrid Haas.
 Starring:
 Ingrid Haas, Barry Rothbart.




STORY AND THEME

Still Wylde is a short film that doesn’t try to tell a story in the traditional sense. Instead, it invites you to sit in a moment like a deeply private, uncertain, and emotional moment. Through its soft pacing and intimate shots, the film captures what it feels like to be caught in transition. Not just physical, but emotional. For me, it’s not just about pregnancy, but about the mental stillness that comes with not knowing who you are just yet. The film doesn’t build toward a plot but it lets you feel your way through it. A woman, clearly pregnant, moves through stillness, silence, and routine. There’s no dialogue, no big twist. But what the film does brilliantly is show what it means to be in between. Between identities. Between roles. Between emotions. It made me think about how change often doesn’t feel like movement but it feels like waiting. Still Wylde captures that perfectly.




CHARACTERS AND PERFORMANCES

The lead actress says nothing, yet communicates everything. Her face doesn’t cry or perform but it’s expressive in its quiet. You can see the weight of the moment in her posture, in how she touches her belly, or stares out into space. She doesn’t need to be “doing” anything to hold your attention. That’s part of the point: she’s becoming someone new, and it’s happening in the background.




CINEMATOGRAPHY

The cinematography is very intimate. Soft lighting, long takes, and close-ups make you feel like you're trespassing in someone’s private moment. There’s a warmth to the color palettelike the inside of a home on a quiet afternoon. Nothing flashy, just calm and personal. The use of space is also important. There’s so much room around her in some shots, but it never feels freeing but rather feels a little lonely. Like she’s surrounded by silence, not support.




SOUND AND 
MUSIC
There’s barely any music. That makes every little sound thus her breath, a creak in the floor more meaningful. The lack of noise isn’t empty; it’s focused. It makes you listen closer. When a soft melody finally shows up, it feels more emotional because the silence built up to it.

              

OVERALL IMPACT

This film won’t work for everyone and it doesn’t try to explain itself. But for me, Still Wylde felt honest. It didn’t dramatize pregnancy or fill it with symbolism. It just let you witness it like looking at someone who isn’t sure how to feel but is feeling everything anyway. It left me thinking not about motherhood, but about transition itself. The kind of change you don’t notice happening until it’s already shaped you.



Story Breakdown

  • Protagonist: The Pregnant Woman (Ingrid Haas)
  • Antagonist: The emotional tension caused by identity loss, uncertainty, and quiet isolation during pregnancy. (internal)
  • Goal: To process and live through the emotional and physical transformation of pregnancy; her goal is more emotional than active.
  • Main Conflict (internal): Grappling with shifting identity, loneliness, and anticipation of motherhood.
  • Obstacle: The quiet tension between her current state and the uncertainty of what lies ahead.
  • Climax: A subtle moment of stillness, looking into the distance realizing she's no longer who she used to be.
  • Resolution: There's no concrete resolution.
  • Genre: Drama.
  • Directed by: Ingrid Haas.
  • Written by: Ingrid Haas.
  • Starring: Ingrid Haas, Barry Rothbart.




FILM ANALYSIS BY: APPLETON DESMOND ESSEL (BFATP28005)
#VisualStorytelling #IVS2025 #UniMACIFT





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