DMovies - Your platform for thought-provoking cinema

Film review search

The fields "country of origin" and "actor" were created in May 2023, and the results are limited to after this date.

After That

Old man walks around and observes post-apocalyptical world, in Super 8 movie replete with abstract images, ambiguity and rumination - from the Slamdance Film Festival

Elderly Xinhao (Jim Lau) walks around an empty city. He visits multiple locations, from the riverbank to the space centre. Meanwhile, a narrator explains their meaning. The deceptively simple premise of this 11-minute short film opens up the doors to manifold visual creations.

Xinhao melts into his bed, lending After That a taste of horror. This moment becomes lost in the film’s many haunting images and words. Only in hindsight does the meaning of this scene deepen. It speaks about emotional and physical fatigue, and the desire to escape, to free ourselves of the burden of everyday life. We exist across different layers of consciousness. Afterlife is a state of unconsciousness detached from our physical shells. Herein lies the power of After That. It does not speak at or instruct the audience. Instead, it makes unconscious suggestions and ignites thoughts. Ideas emerge of their own volition.

Each viewing of the film will see a shift in our perception of the story. Inevitably our eye will be drawn to its rich array of imagery: the nature, the landscape, the skies and the water. These will forge different thoughts and ideas. While After That’s abstract artistry creates a fluid sense of meaning, Directir Xinhao Lu and Mufeng Han entertain at least one concrete idea: the fear of WW3. They question whether humankind can resists the “death drive” (the foolish urge to expedite our demise).

To boot, After That is a rumination on human self-awareness. It toys with the notion that we are players in our own story, and that the world is a stage. The narrator uses the second person in his voiceover: this might simply be an extension of Xinhao’s ego. This device helps to place Xinhao at the heart of the story. the two filmmakers allow their audiences to have fun in pulling apart the dreamlike world that they created.

The two helmer, who also sign the cinematography, opted to film After That in Super 8, adding an otherworldly vibe to the proceedings. This quality is ambiguous. It appears that the film is set in the future, but one can never shake the feeling that this might be something else. After That feels like a dream or an experimental movie, while also emphasising the topic of memory.

After That premiered at the Slamdance Film Festival.


By Paul Risker - 28-02-2026

While technically an English-based film critic and interviewer, Paul shows his political disgruntlement towards his homeland by identifying instead as a European writer. You’ll often find him agree...

Film review search

The fields "country of origin" and "actor" were created in May 2023, and the results are limited to after this date.

interview

Paul Risker interviews the director of eerie sci-fi [Read More...]

1

Nataliia Serebriakova interviews the director of stripper-turned-fighter story [Read More...]

2

Paul Risker interviews the Canadian director of Nina [Read More...]

3

Lida Bach interviews the Chilean director of Berlinale [Read More...]

4

Lida Bach interviews the director of the contemplative [Read More...]

5

Nataliia Sereebriakova interviews the Romanian director or Berlinale [Read More...]

6

Nataliia Serebriakova interviews the directors of "traumatising" children's [Read More...]

7

Paul Risker interviews the co-director, writer and actress [Read More...]

8

Read More

Our dirty questions to Xinhao Lu

 

Paul Risker - 24-02-2026

Paul Risker interviews the director of eerie sci-fi short After That; they discuss geopolitical tensions, WW3, political cinema, Tchaikovsky, Super 8, and a lot more - read our exclusive interview [Read More...]

Legend Has It

Thomas Lorber
2026

Nataliia Serebriakova - 28-02-2026

Male stripper has to fight performative masculinity, thus turning his body into a killing machine - playful proof of concept premieres at the Sapporo International Film Festival [Read More...]

Uchronia

Fil Ieropoulos
2026

Daniel Theophanous - 27-02-2026

Bold and uncompromising Greek film reinterprets subversive French poet Arthur Rimbaud by weaving together the stories of more recent queer icons  - from the Forum Expanded Section of the Berlinale [Read More...]