Shortly after completing Carriage, I decided to produce a shortened version, titled Parallel Carriage, initially as a response to a call for a film festival which limited films to a maximum of two minutes. The festival specialised in work made with smartphones (the original footage for Carriage was shot on my iPhone).
This afforded the opportunity to approach the edit in a different way. The slow build-up used in Carriage was not possible with such a short time frame. Additionally, there was not the time to have the original footage of the whole train shown as a coda. Instead I selected just three of the extracted windows, ones where the sense of individual narratives of the carriages inhabitants was strongest, and combined then with the footage of the whole train, slowed to approximately 50% of real time (again using the pixel motion frame blending in AE).
The film considers the uncanny nature of the experience of passing another train at night, where the windows into the space of that other carriage are pools of light in a black void, offering portals into another world. Individual windows slowed down to 10% of real time draw out the movement of the inhabitants of that parallel carriage. The soundtrack to that “other” space, is produced from the space of the carriage from which the camera, filmmaker, and viewer are located – slowed down to match the images, it becomes an abstract roar, echoing the black void which the windows flow through.