By Penelope de la Cruz
originally published: 02/18/2026
Annie, wake up is an experimental film by Laura Ivins, an experimental filmmaker based in Southern Indiana. Ivins has been working on this film for over a decade, beginning to collect footage in 2012. The project developed slowly over time and does not follow a traditional narrative. Instead, the film grew out of years of careful reflection and revisiting the material, and that thoughtful process is a big part of how it feels. The work carries a strong sense of time passing and allows meaning to form gradually rather than being forced.
The film explores the idea of home as something complicated and often difficult to define. Ivins draws from her own conflicted feelings about home to examine how personal experience connects to larger cultural expectations, especially in the United States, where home is often portrayed as a place of comfort, safety, and stability. In Annie, wake up, home can feel familiar and grounding, but it can also feel restrictive or tense. The film does not resolve these tensions. Instead, she presents them and lets the viewer experience them fully alongside her.
The film is divided into ten chapters, which give it structure while still leaving plenty of room for reflection. Annie, the central figure, is not a character in the usual sense. She is more like a focal point, a way for viewers to move thoughtfully through spaces and ideas. By only hearing her voice, the film asks us to notice how home feels, rather than what it looks like. Each chapter allows a different view into domestic life and the ways community and history shape the spaces we inhabit over time.
Ivins constructs the film using assemblage techniques. She combines 8mm home movies, stop-motion, direct animation, and archival sound to create a rich, complex visual experience. She layers these materials to develop a sense of complexity and paradox. The home movies feel intimate and nostalgic, but the film never treats them as purely sentimental. It shows the comforts of home while also pointing to the pressures and limitations that have shaped domestic life over time. The film encourages the audience to notice these mixed feelings and hold them simultaneously, rather than being guided toward a single emotional response.
Sound plays a vital role in the film. The hum of a film projector in many sequences adds a sense of nostalgia, connecting the past and the present. The editing is careful and deliberate, contributing to the understanding of time passing and how the idea of home is felt throughout the film. Rather than guiding the viewer, the film lets the sounds and images create their own unique atmosphere. Ivins blends archival and contemporary material in a way that blurs memory and experience, from the personal to the shared history. The voices, sounds, and images carry a sense of time and presence, showing how home can feel both comforting and complex in subtle ways.
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Ultimately, Annie, wake up is a film that lingers with you because it gives time to experience the spaces, sounds, and past that shape it. It is not about plot or a clear ending, but about being present in these domestic spaces and thinking carefully about them. Each of the ten chapters adds to this experience, making the film patient, reflective, and immersive. The audience moves along with Annie through these worlds and is invited to think about how home is shaped by personal experience and larger cultural forces, and how it can feel both familiar and tense. It leaves a quiet impression, encouraging the viewer to carry these feelings and ideas about home thoughtfully beyond the screen.
The 2026 United States Super 8 Film + Digital Video Festival, which is part of the New Jersey Film Festival, will be taking place on Saturday, February 21 and Sunday, February 22, 2026. The 3 film programs will be Online for 24 Hours on their show dates and there will be 2 In-Person screenings at 5PM or 7 PM in Voorhees Hall #105/Rutgers University, 71 Hamilton Street, New Brunswick, NJ. General Admission Ticket=$15 Per Program; In-Person Only Student Ticket=$10 Per Program. Annie, wake up will be screening on Sunday, February 22! For more info and to buy tickets go here: https://watch.eventive.org/newjerseyfilmfestivalspring2026
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