

A 32-minute poem you watch with your eyes closed open.
Observing as the World Burns: Poems is an evocative, introspective short film that transforms lines of verse into raw visual poetry—confronting the dual forces of personal introspection and outward chaos. Anchored by cinematic performances, layered voice-over, and an emotive soundscape, the film embodies the tension between witnessing life’s unraveling and finding meaning within it. Rather than dramatizing action, this film immerses the viewer in the experience of attention—the act of watching, contemplating, and articulating what it means to be alive. At the same time, everything feels like it’s burning. It is both a cinematic poem and a visual diary—an invitation to witness, feel, and reflect alongside the narrator.
Sound
Voice and silence weaponized into emotional architecture.
Cinematography
Candlelight as character, not just aesthetic.
Director
Ethan T.K. Trinh
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Poetic essay films trace lineage from Chris Marker to contemporary TikTok confessional aesthetics—this sits somewhere between them, refusing easy categorization.
Trinh performed, directed, and likely lit every candle himself—true one-man-burning.