In the face of a slow but impending apocalypse, what binds three
seemingly divergent lives (a writer, a photographer, an old man), isn't
the commonality of a perceived future death, but the layered and complex
fabric of how loss, abuse, trauma, and death have shaped their pasts,
and how these pasts continue to haunt their present moments, a moment in
which time seems to be running out. The writer, traumatized by the
violent death of her mother when she was a child, lives alone with her
dog and struggles to finish her book. The photographer, stunted by the
death of his grandmother and caretaker, struggles to take a single
picture and enters into a complicated relationship with the writer. The
old man, facing his past in small doses, spends his time watching
television and reorganizing the objects in his apartment to stay
distracted from the deterioration around him. A depiction of the cycles
of abuse and trauma in a prolonged end-time, Imagine a Death examines
the ways in which our pasts envelop us, the ways in which we justify
horrible things in the name of survival, all of the horrible and
beautiful things we are capable of when we are hurt and broken, and the
animal (and plant) companions that ground us.