Borderline
Directed by Alex Chandon
A walk on the thin borderline between reality and imagination. London cityscape that is real and yet impossible. Alex Chandon turns London upside-down and inside out in this ingenious M. C. Escher-inspired short. Pedestrians stroll under a watery sky as the Thames stretches across the heavens, whilst cars drive along the roof of Waterloo Bridge as book buyers browse oblivious below. The South Bank features prominently in delightfully askew visions, with deranged shots of the National Theatre and the Queen Elizabeth Hall undercroft (the haven for skateboarders, seen here leaping into oblivion). The Hayward Gallery, St. Martin in the Fields and many other London landmarks are also surreally readjusted. The ominous music by the Dark Poets and the destructive images suggest that this film should be unsettling, but in fact the effect is amusing rather than disquieting, and the chief pleasure of this short is in adjusting one’s perspective to recognise the famous locations.
Crew
Original Music Composer
Studio ranking
See where Borderline lands among the top-ranked movies associated with onedotzero.
Open best onedotzero movies
Language ranking
See how Borderline compares with other top-ranked English movies.
Open best english movies
More like this
Explore public related-title picks for viewers looking for movies like Borderline.
Open movies like Borderline
Where to watch
Open the answer-first viewing guide for Borderline, including current streaming, rental, and purchase options.
Open where to watch Borderline