Tilda Swinton stars as Eva Khatchadourian, a former travel writer now relegated to clerical work, whose recollections, triggered by easy visual rhymes, dose out snippets of a past that she remembers fully and painfully.
His eye continued to ferret out coincidence and disparity as well as visual rhymes and alliterations in the world's routine disorder.
This might be one of the unexpected visual rhymes that nature so often secretes, but in any case it functions as a delicate binder between what was virtually within reach of the artist's hand, as a physical fact, and a distant and fugitive atmospheric effect.
This visual rhyme, "one image echoing the other," is so extraordinary that one wonders whether Stott has made a real contribution to Newton scholarship.
Mickey's and Mr. Matte's heads now make a little visual rhyme: their hairlines match, to Mr. Matte's horror.
And then there are the pure sound rhymes-"bombs/someone," "outside/why/crucified"-and the combination of sound and visual rhyme in "nipples/little" and "yard/custard."
"Composed as a poem, it's a hybrid of several film stocks and video formats, digitally processed to create a violent, yet lyrical, collage of textured loops, internal rhythms and visual rhymes, finally completing the work's cycle back to film."
An eye rhyme, also called a visual rhyme or a sight rhyme, is a rhyme in which two words are spelled similarly but pronounced differently and have come into general use through "poetic license" also known as artistic license.
Ramsay's narrative cuts between these four strands freely and often, but she gives it structure with ingenious visual rhymes that force the audience to make links between Kevin's crime and what came before it.
"The caption for each illustration is in the form of a question and when the question is signed an ASL visual rhyme is produced."