Short Stuff

Watch Symbiosis, an animated short film about sex and jealousy

Illustration of 2 women in a laundromat, vibrant circular patterns on washing machines.
Illustration of 2 women in a laundromat, vibrant circular patterns on washing machines.
The French-Hungarian co-production, made by artist Nadja Andrasev, is on the longlist for this year’s Oscars.

The domino effect that forms human connections has never been more relevant in our coronavirus age, as droplets pass from person-to-person, linking us through an invisible chain. Symbiosis charts a different type of intimate relationship that can exist between otherwise strangers: sex with the same person.

The film follows a nameless woman who realises that her partner is cheating on her with multiple other women and proceeds to stalk these mistresses, swiping little pieces of them – stray hairs, trash – and adding them to an ever-growing collection that come to hold more intrigue than the infidelity itself. The sexual energy of these mistresses causes objects to vibrate and shape-shift so the animation progresses through this natural yet dreamlike process of one thing becoming another.

The story is told almost entirely without dialogue, just the occasional ‘Hey!’ or distant murmur included for sonic effect, with a spell cast through a hypnotic sound design by Péter Benjamin Lukács and original compositions by Mads Vadsholt.

Andrasev shows that the couple’s sex life has dwindled to nothingness. He is disinterested in her body, in contrast to the appetite he shows for other women. The pain of her physical loneliness is made palpable until there is a transformation. Insects and butterflies are used to symbolic effect. Indeed, Andrasev, who worked as second assistant director on Peter Strickland’s BDSM lesbian love story The Duke of Burgundy, used its same insect supervisor, Tamás Németh.

Symbiosis evolved out of Andrasev’s own primal experience of jealousy, something she recollects feeling to a distressing extent at a party years ago. She has since reached a different perspective and has given her emotional arc to the lead character. Insecurity blossoms into an empathic fascination for these other women.

In real-life Andrasev has now “collected” some of her former antagonists. She says: “You can start thinking about a man’s perspective: appreciating sexuality, beauty and the intelligence and talent of other women. It’s a little bit of an obsession, like you are in love with them in a strange way because you can see the attraction.”

‘In love in a strange way’ is a great way to characterise the relationships between the women in Symbiosis. Watch it below and let us know what you think @LWLies.

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