Logline
On a deserted Greek beach, a mother, connected to her daughter through music, turns the sound of her piano into an invisible thread that pulls her child from the depths of the sea.
On a deserted Greek beach, a mother, connected to her daughter through music, turns the sound of her piano into an invisible thread that pulls her child from the depths of the sea.
In the silence of a secluded Greek beach, a father and his 12-year-old daughter share the innocent joy of a summer’s day. But when the sea becomes a realm of peril and the girl is dragged underwater, the mother’s music – played from afar yet charged with telepathic power – becomes the lifeline that brings her back to safety. A wordless story where art becomes the ultimate bond between life and hope.
This film is a visual poem exploring the invisible bonds between souls, particularly the profound connection between a mother and her child. The choice to eliminate dialogue allows for a pure expression of emotion, conveyed through the universal language of music and nature.
The setting – a deserted Greek beach – serves as a metaphor for human fragility against the vastness of nature. Wide shots will evoke a sense of isolation, while subtle details – the sound of the waves or the vibrations of the piano – will amplify the feeling of telepathic connection. The underwater moments will be choreographed like a dance, a balance between life and death, struggle and hope.
The mother’s music is more than a soundtrack – it is an invisible character, a force capable of intervening in physical reality, saving and healing. Through this story, I aim to show how art, in its purest form, can become a language of love, salvation, and transcendence.