
Synopsis: Soliloquium is a visual meditation on the experience of breaking away from the rush from the anonymous collectivity that shapes our gestures and thoughts, yet deprives them of singularity. The protagonist abandons the faceless crowd to enter solitude, where a reflection awaits not another person but an inner shadow. The encounter does not lead to harmony but to tension: in facing one another, a difference is revealed that is also the most intimate. The film is not about reconciliation but about the rift, where the question emerges: who am I in relation to myself? “Soliloquium” treats the image as a philosophical monologue – a speech without an addressee, turned inward. It is a dialogue that does not seek resolution, but deepens the fissure between the self and the Other, disclosing solitude as the space of thought and the possibility of transformation. Silence, rhythm, and recurring visual motifs operate like fragmented sentences, each frame an attempt to approach the threshold where the meeting with reflection becomes an existential event, impossible to capture in a single narrative.