'All Light, Everywhere' Review: Fascinating, Fraught and Sinister Essay on the Unreliability of the Image 'All Light, Everywhere' Review: Fascinating, Fraught and Sinister Essay on the Unreliability of the Image Surveillance, policing and spy pigeons figure into a chillingly insightful doc on the ethics of looking and the incompleteness of seeing. Jessica Kiang, provided by FacebookTwitterEmail Courtesy of Memory A highly persuasive film about how we should be wary of film’s power to persuade, Theo Anthony’s discursive and disturbing “All Light, Everywhere” is a superb if sinister example of how the outwardly modest essay format can deploy arguments that challenge us to unpick our most basic assumptions. Here, it’s the idea that a thing and its recorded image can never have a 1:1 relationship: It’s not just that our eyes deceive us, it’s that we’re conditioned to accept the representations of those deceptions as the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, so help us God.