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You’re listening to Filmmaking Giants. Today’s filmmaker works at the opposite end of cinema from explanation. Lynne Ramsay does not tell you what to think, and she does not walk you through what happens. She places you inside a state. Inside a sensation. Inside a wound. Her films are built from fragments—images, sounds, gestures, memories that surface without warning—and together they form something closer to lived experience than to narrative design. Ramsay is a director of pure sensory cinema, where meaning arrives through feeling first and language only later, if at all.
By Niklas OstermanYou’re listening to Filmmaking Giants. Today’s filmmaker works at the opposite end of cinema from explanation. Lynne Ramsay does not tell you what to think, and she does not walk you through what happens. She places you inside a state. Inside a sensation. Inside a wound. Her films are built from fragments—images, sounds, gestures, memories that surface without warning—and together they form something closer to lived experience than to narrative design. Ramsay is a director of pure sensory cinema, where meaning arrives through feeling first and language only later, if at all.