A boy and his father are emotionally and physically separated on the day earth intermittently loses gravity.
Direction
Victori builds dread through domestic silence, not spectacle.
Cinematography
Gravity-loss sequences shot with haunting, dreamlike restraint.
Acting
Eggold's barely-contained panic against Avitia's wounded stillness.

Director
David Victori
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Shot in just four days on a shoestring budget, the zero-gravity effects were achieved almost entirely through practical wire work and creative camera angles.
The film deliberately never explains the gravity phenomenon — Victori wanted audiences to accept cosmic unfairness the way children accept parental absence: without logic, only pain.