Film Review: All That Breathes

The Oscar-nominated documentary from India is a visual masterpiece that will make you see differently.

Madhvi Ramani

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Early on in All That Breathes, a kite swoops down from the polluted Delhi air, snatches a pair of glasses from a man’s face, and flies off with them. It’s an apt metaphor for this documentary about birds itself; the film disorientates, forces you to refocus, and ultimately changes your vision.

A man with glasses looking at a bird that is standing on a desk in front of his face.
All That Breathes, HBO Documentary Films / Sideshow/ Submarine Deluxe.

Shaunak Sen’s film follows two brothers who rescue injured birds in Delhi, one of the most polluted cities in the world. It’s also a city teeming with animals that increasingly live in, and adapt to human environments.

Extreme close-ups bring various creatures into focus; a turtle clambers up a heap of rubbish by the side of the road, a centipede emerges from a puddle, an owl pops its head through a gap in a wall, monkeys scramble across crisscrossing telephone wires and electricity cables. And of course, there are birds, swooping, soaring, squawking — and occasionally falling out of the sky.

That’s where the two brothers Nadeem and Saud come in — they’ve been rescuing the city’s birds for over 20 years from their small, crowded basement, where they also run a soap dispensing business. In a way, these two activities are similar — both are attempts to clean…

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