
by Chimichan
Phak, a teenage boy, receives an old Leica film camera from his mother—an ailing former curator—along with a simple request: “Please photograph me as a work of art, not as a sick woman.” Through the lens, Phak learns to arrange the world into images—carefully framing his mother, preserving only her beauty, and hiding what hurts too much to remember. As her illness worsens, photography becomes both his refuge and his burden. On her final day, lying in a hospital bed, his mother says one sentence that makes Phak lower the camera and miss the last photograph he was meant to take. That absence leaves him empty for years. Until he meets another woman— someone who may become the final image he has been searching for, or the one he is afraid to capture.