Femme Filmmakers Festival Review: Can (Kailee McGee)

Femme Filmmakers Festival Can Kailee McGee Filmotomy

Content warning: cancer, medical treatment, scars, emotional distress.

Can is a well-executed and deeply personal short in which Kailee McGee turns the camera on herself while navigating a late-stage breast cancer diagnosis. Written, co-produced and edited by McGee, the film unfolds largely as an inner monologue.

Shifting between versions of the old me, the new me and the future me. The title resonates both with cancer and with canvas, as she remakes herself on screen in an attempt to navigate a difficult transition she cannot otherwise control.

Raw close-ups of her unmade face, tears and scars lend the film an immediacy that is both vulnerable and confronting. As McGee asks whether to give in, exploit the experience or find a way through. Honest, layered and unsettlingly intimate, Can is a striking meditation on illness, identity and self-representation.

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Author: Ellen Cheshire

Ellen Cheshire is a film writer and lecturer who has written books on Jane Campion, Ang Lee, The Coen Brothers, Audrey Hepburn and Bio-Pics. Ellen has also written on women filmmakers in Silent Women: Pioneers of Cinema, Under Fire: a century of war movies, Counterculture UK- a celebration and the WJEC Eduqas Film Studies for A Level and AS text book.

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