“In
Amélie, the protagonist finds a tin box of childhood memorabilia in her wall, and though it just looks like a bunch of old shit, the extreme care with which it was curated and then hidden makes it clear it was precious to some person of the past and hence to Amélie, who needs, the film posits, to get a life. Adults watching this scene are often very moved. It brings back to them, I think, a time when the smallest things take on a significance that even the largest things later on down the line can’t match. To a child watching, however, I imagine there is just the ball-ache of being found out - it was such an excellent hiding place and such bad luck that Princess Diana had to go ahead and die at that very moment, and children love to hide things because they’re given no sanctuary.”
―
Krystelle Bamford,
Idle Grounds