Skip to content
Sangita Ekka Sangita Ekka

Sharing my connectome

  • Creator Economy
    • Arts
    • Digital Marketing
  • Marketplace
  • Reviews
    • Reading between frames
    • Reading between lines
    • Listicles
  • Cancelled Cartoons
  • Shorts
  • Opinion
  • About Me
Sangita Ekka
Sangita Ekka

Sharing my connectome

It’s Such A Beautiful Day

Sangita Ekka, July 2, 2023June 23, 2024

Don Hertzfeldt is not a household name, at least not yet. Hence the phrase – It’s such a beautiful day doesn’t strike as a movie in certain corners of the world.

Two-time Academy Award nominee, Don’s animation style is a dichotomy of philosophical sophistication conveyed through the simplicity of stick figures.

It’s Such A Beautiful Day is an hour-long compilation of his earlier works – Everything Will Be OK, I Am So Proud Of You, and the titular third section that makes the final part.

This film is available on his YouTube channel for member subscription and on Vimeo with rent/buy options.

The simplistic approach to filmmaking

It’s Such A Beautiful Day was released in 2011 as an independent section and later listed on Netflix as an anthology.

Forming the first impression as an amateur’s take, the film slowly takes the audience on a wild emotional ride as the protagonist experiences living with mental illness.

Don introduces Bill in white blobs against pitch-black frames. Simple drawings go in and out of vision as if restricting the viewer from gaining the whole picture.

He ensures that we only pay attention to things that Bill notices at a given moment – demotivating t-shirt quotes, plastic bags, birds, “everything will be ok”.

Don sets the context of mental illness early in the film, and every horrid manifestation from Bob’s imagination takes shape through pencil drawings.

Addressing dementia

Animation films depict shards of mental health but rarely set a theme for a movie. Adapted from Eto Mori’s book – Karafuru (Colorful) is a rare gem that portrays teenage depression.

Don approaches this theme differently.

Bill is not a teenager; he is an adult.

The subtleties take a backseat, and Bill’s awkwardness is evident from the first frames. From greetings strangers with – “weh” to overthinking, repeated actions, and hallucinations, Don captures his daily struggles and sufferings.

For a viewer who cannot relate, Bill’s fall into dementia can make you hug yourself while he goes in and out of hospital beds, longs for connections and love, hallucinates, and forgets things.

Making it real

WHO reports that every year 10 million people are identified with dementia.

In Bill’s first hospitalization scene, he’s fascinated by the beautiful sunlight streaming through the window and wants to reach it. But he couldn’t; he was weak and fell the moment he left his bed.

Don makes a strong “thud” in this scene, and suddenly, Bill ceases to be a weightless 2D stick figure. He becomes a living, breathing entity who is perhaps sharing a room with us.

It’s Such A Beautiful Day cleverly uses color to convey emotions. The movie has a befitting monochromatic theme, but now and then, Don introduces a bit of colour or a sound that ties the story to reality.

And still, Bill will live on…

Despite the disturbing aspects and the blatant illustration of everything horrid that crossed Bill’s head, beauty and vulnerability are scattered throughout the film.

Bill notices a random – “I love you” on the playground sand, the texture of the grass and his mother, who suddenly looks very old to him.

Don leaves these little pockets of his humanity as Bill eventually realizes – he wants to experience life in every flavour and form. The movie ends on a heartwarming note on what it means to live truly.

In Conclusion

Don Hertzfeldt has a gift for conveying complex philosophical thoughts in a fashion that the masses can understand. This very nature of his films makes it difficult to articulate what I can talk about it.

It’s Such A Beautiful Day is immensely depressing but also strangely beautiful. His drawings, animation style, and language are simple but emotive.

The viewer almost becomes Bill, living his reality, questioning it, and I guess that’s the highest form of art an artist can aspire to.

AD



Reading between frames Reviews USA

Post navigation

Previous post
Next post

Related Posts

Reading between frames Fanart of away, a film by glints zilbalodis (1)

Watching Gints Zilbalodis’s Away, Aqua, and Priorities before Flow

March 9, 2025March 10, 2025

Gints Zilbalodis has achieved the impressive feat of capturing an Academy Award while competing with global animation giants. For the third year in a row (as reported by many publications), a familiar, Western household animation studio lost the Oscar battle. And while winning an Oscar is not the only indication…

Read More
Reading between frames Nitaboh watercolor painting sangita ekka i will die an artist

“Nitaboh” and the pursuit of mastery through Shu Ha Ri

May 6, 2020September 4, 2023

Based on the historical novel by Daiyo Kazuo, the story of master shamisen player – Nitabō is an inspiring unfolding of what one can achieve by finding a sense of purpose and the one to undergo Shu Ha Ri. Set at an era when Japan’s Edo government (which began in…

Read More
Reading between frames Mei Mei From Kung Fu Panda 3 By Sangita Ekka

What does Kung Fu Panda 3 teach about the inevitability of relationship conflicts?

November 26, 2023August 29, 2024

Animation movies are more than just a means of entertainment. Throughout the evolution of art in the previous century, animated films have conveyed the spectrum of human emotions with the then-available technologies and art forms. The Kung Fu Panda series is a personal favorite on many levels. The messages it…

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Support My Work!

Buy Me a Coffee

2D 3D Aditya Bharadwaj AI Anime Aniruddh Menon Art Belgium China Creepy Disney Dreamworks Finland France GenAI Haseeb Rehman Hayao Miyazaki India IP Iran Israel Japan Kati Macskássy Malaysia Manga Movie Naruto Non-Ghibli Painting Pakistan Periods Poland Review Sandhya Visvanathan Savera Jahan Shoumik Biswas Sourav Roychoudhury South Korea Stop Motion Stop Motion Animation Studio Ghibli UK USA Vaibhavi Studios Watercolor Experiences

©2026 Sangita Ekka | WordPress Theme by SuperbThemes