From screen energy to real-world motion
By scanning the QR code at the screening: Welcome to this page!
This page is a film-literate bridge between what lives on screen and a real object that carries story through movement.
That single object became a lifelong connection to table tennis as rhythm, movement, and identity.SIR is a racquet-shaped smartphone cover. The phone sits inside the paddle, turning motion into filmed,
rhythmic physical engagement.
What you’re looking at
A real object with film logic.
Not a product pitch. Not an interruption. A continuation:
the idea that certain objects can carry narrative beyond the screen—into hands, into movement, into life.
Phone inside
Filming + replay
Rhythm-driven
Ages 8–98
A timely parallel
A racquet-shaped image surfaced after the film.
The racquet-shaped purse is not in the film—but its public-life echo is real.
SIR lives in that same visual lane, and it does something tangible:
it turns table-tennis motion into filmed, structured physical engagement.
What SIR is
A smartphone inside a racquet. Movement inside a story.
- Film: record yourself, a class, a demo, or a conversation.
- Move: table-tennis shadow swings + footwork become repeatable sequences.
- Rhythm: music and tempo turn exercise into performance.
- Progress: practice becomes visible, replayable, refinable.
What SIR is not
Not a gimmick. Not a tech demo.
This is about continuity—from survival and migration, to music and rhythm,
to table tennis as daily practice, to an object that makes that practice filmable and shareable.
Not asking to change the film.
Not asking for sponsorship.
Not forcing branding into art.
Simply offering a real object that can extend cultural interest into motion and wellness.
Why table tennis works
Rhythm. Focus. Coordination. Social energy.
Table tennis is one of the most accessible lifetime sports—physical and cognitive at once.
- Hand–eye coordination
- Balance + footwork
- Cognitive engagement
- Low barrier to entry
Why SIR matters now
Because it makes movement visible.
Every session becomes filmable content.
Every move becomes a repeatable pattern.
Every group session can feel like a small event—not a workout.
Watch the SIR segment
Note: To jump straight to SIR in the video below, skip to around the 28-minute mark.
If audio doesn’t start automatically on phones, that’s normal—mobile browsers block autoplay sound.
Want to see SIR in hand?
I can show the prototype, demonstrate the filming + movement concept,
and discuss how SIR can extend interest in table tennis into fitness, content, and community—
without stepping on the film’s art.