The film’s use of color is extraordinary. The “Queen of Hearts” is never shown, but her presence is felt through deep crimsons that bleed into Lena’s gray world—a scarf on a fence, lipstick on a coffee cup, a heart-shaped stain on a mattress.
4/5 Stars (or 8.2/10)
However, based on the evocative phrasing, I can construct a full speculative review as if it were an —a psychological drama exploring grief, obsession, and fractured memory. Review: Searching for- Queen of Hearts in- (2024) – A Haunting Palindrome of Loss Director: Ava Ren (fictional) Runtime: 94 minutes Format: Limited theatrical / VOD Searching for- Queen of Hearts in-
At first glance, the grammatically jarring title seems like a marketing error. But it’s a clue. The dashes represent Lena’s stutter-step reality. She is searching for (object missing), Queen of Hearts (mythic target), in- (incomplete location, perhaps “inside herself” or “in the gap between memory and truth”). By the final shot—Lena opening a door onto absolute whiteness, the screen cutting to black mid-knob-turn—you realize the film is the title. It never ends. You are in- the searching. The film’s use of color is extraordinary
The narrative’s refusal to resolve is both its strength and its flaw. Is the Queen of Hearts real? A dissociative identity? A metaphor for the mother’s own lost self? The film wisely leaves it ambiguous, but around the 70-minute mark, the repetition of “searching-for” actions (opening drawers, rewinding tapes, staring at water) starts to feel less like meditation and more like treadmilling. Some viewers will call it profound; others will check their watches. Review: Searching for- Queen of Hearts in- (2024)
The Vanishing (1988), Personal Shopper , I’m Thinking of Ending Things .