Thursday, June 27, 2013

[LOCAL REVIEW] ANOTHER 48 HOURS - NIGHT ONE of the Buffalo 48 Hour Film Project



Last night marked day one of Buffalo’s 48 Hour Film project underscoring just how difficult making a film in 48 Hours can be. City producer Garrett Vorreuter welcomed an enthusiastic crowd stating it was this year’s best line up ("best" a little subjective – see my post on last year’s jurycertified best of). Tonight’s screening (at 7PM) contains the other half and we’ll have our review up tomorrow.

As for last night, section “A” – again making a movie in 48 Hours is no easy feat and each group was met with mixed successes – no masterpieces amongst them I’m sad to say. (for this reason we encourage filmmakers to get in contact with us once their films are completed for a full coverage right here)

Captive (by Project Sandbox/SunSpin Films) suffers first from story – it is what it is: a women is “captured” walking with her kid and thrown in a basement – apart from some decent shots achieving her POV it is what it is and we’ve seen it a billion times before. This is the microwave burrito version of filmmaking.

For Your Consideration (by Framed Meat) plays like one of those movies the stoner kid makes in less than 48 hours because he had to for class. Violating the first principal of filmmaking “show don’t tell” – it’s a dark comedy that’s light on the laughs (and concept too).

Life is a Beach (by Canisius College Video Institute) is a painfully simple premise, not sure really what it was saying: a guy lounges clearly not at the beach waiting for a record deal. Again – time is not a friend here. Technically its pretty well shot (but poorly sound mixed).

Slick Rudd: The Origin Story (by A Major Films) is the second 48 Hour effort by 16-year old Yale Freed and it scored the biggest laughs of the evening. Setting up a tween mistaken identity film, Freed pushes back to reveal his own anxieties about competing in the 48 Hour Film Project, and his own identity crisis. This is like the white, male teen version of Cheryl Dunne’s classic The Watermelon Women, in the suburbs.

Bodies (by Avenue Now) is gangster flick that commits a big sin – it’s pretty well shot except for the most important moment in the flick! Restrained, the use of sound is quite impressive.

Artificial Embers (by Permanent Inc) is pretty well acted and lensed (and one of the three of the evening shot in widescreen cinemascope)  - drawing the “romance” category it’s a little cold and maybe not as romantic as you’d expect, the story is really a science fiction film (I think, although that’s not terribly explicit).

Jolene (by ND Studios) suffers from uneven performances – a southern country music drama (in the thriller/suspense genre) it’s on the nose with professional cinematography, its ambition (and the fact that several actors can’t really pull off a strong southern accent) is a distraction.

Franklin Street (by Point and Shoot) marks the return of Tracey B. Wilson (seen in our previous post in Perfect Pitch) – working in the “drama” genre this is a story with the potential to be powerful, the performances are fine but not as polished as they should be. Mostly well done from a technical aspect, the story is about as well polished as you can get in 48 Hours.


Filmmakers and teams (actually anybody- - really) are invited to submit links to their works for full review, often many go back and polish their films a bit more and we’d love to see them. Get in contact with us at BuffaloMovieBlog@gmail.com or @BuffaloMovieBlog on Twitter.

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