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“New Year’s Eve” – Whenever You Go, There You Are

A humorous short for those stumbling into the new calendar.

New Year’s Eve (2018) dir. Pranav Bhasin

I’d like to sound off a minute about New Year’s Day falling on a Wednesday. To me, and I don’t believe it’s only me, it feels like the year is stumbling right out of the gate. Take the rest of the week off to recuperate from a late night or squeeze in two more days of work before the weekend? Or skip the whole thing all together? These are not big problems, but there’s a slight existential pressure on the New Year to keep the path smooth as long as you can and put off the inevitable backslide into uncalculated muddling through life until at least Martin Luther King Day, February if you can manage it.

This short from Mumbai-based director Pranav Bhasin captures this feeling of a year out of gear from the start. The young man finds himself with no prospects for kicking off the New Year right – namely at the right party with the right girl – and when he receives opportunity, he gets too much of it and watches his good fortune cancel itself out. The whole rise and fall takes place in something close to real time, nine minutes. God knows what the five hundred sixty-five thousand six hundred starting after midnight will bring.

Long takes are a tricky choice, but this one is bolstered by a well-chosen route and an even better choice of daylight hours, taking advantage of the golden hour for beautiful frames that also point to the rapidly diminishing hours of the old year. Monologue-heavy filmmaking is another bold move in a short, not to mention phone conversation acting. Not everybody is a natural Bob Newhart but Arnav Bahsin (Pranav’s brother) has a deadpan that makes his downtrodden approach to the situation humorously Charlie Brown-esque. Poor guy can’t even buy the kind of wine he wants. Much like good ol’ Chuck (maybe the guy urinating is Pig Pen?), it’s tough to see where the malaise changes from hard luck to bad attitude. Maybe this year it’ll be clearer.