To be captive is to be confined, both in space and in time. The captive one is not only and necessarily a prisoner, but becomes an inherent part of that space, his identity being continually projected on it. The captivity space itself is in turn not inert; it is rather characterized by whomever it contains, it is shaped by that experience.
Director
No comment for this review.
Sign inStatusReleased: 13 years ago
January 2, 2012
LanguageUnknown
Spoken LanguagesUnknown
Budget-
Revenue-