A young woman returns to the places she once shared with her closest friend: a park, the Underground, and a quiet flat. The friend has since faded from her life, yet her presence still seems to move through everything — familiar spaces, objects left behind, and fragments of memory that surface without warning. Eventually, through a notebook tucked away, the friend seems to speak to her once again.
Without spoken dialogue, Don't Forget Me is a quiet meditation on intimate friendship, memory, and the emotional spaces left behind when someone disappears from a life without clear words of farewell.
The work draws on East Asian aesthetic traditions of emotional restraint, where intimacy is often carried not through declaration, but through what is withheld, suggested, or left unsaid. It approaches memory not through dramatic flashback, but through quiet attention: a place revisited, an object held, and a silence allowed to settle. Don't Forget Me asks what cinematic language can hold when ordinary words fall away.
