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Nest
Between 2020 and 2021, the Icelandic filmmaker Hlynur Pálmason filmed his three children building a tree house in their backyard. Using a fixed frame, his lockdown project yielded a fascinating study of the seasons grounded in the leisurely rhythms of kids at play.
Pálmason’s Nest is a deceptively simple film, made as a collaboration between father and children. While the bulk of the film observes the real-life construction of the kids’ tree house, Pálmason sneaks in little scenes of fiction to introduce an element of mystery into its fold. According to him, “sometimes [he] had an idea, something they had an idea” and while filming the construction, they jointly found themselves piecing together a narrative that spoke to the unexpected hardships of building a tree house.
Pálmason stated that “not knowing where to go” made his film “exciting, because I think that reflects or colours the film.” Nest — in spite of its rigorous, formal camerawork — works in similarly mysterious ways, slowly unfurling surprises that transform the straightforward task of looking at the same frame into a thrilling experience.
Bio Hlynur Pálmason
Nest is not limited to an exploration of human dynamics within the children’s microcosmos, but more so becomes a study of their habitat and environment, which aligns with the decision to place the camera at a distance from the characters. Though we might have suffered from a lack of close-ups and facial expressions, rendering the children more like LEGO minifigures than dramatic protagonists, we benefited from a panoramic view of a marvelous transforming scenery. People and nature are equally important in Nest, and both are handled with care and tenderness.
- This film was #78 in the “Greatest” Short Films of All Time 2025