Tag Archives: Sundance Film Festival

‘Paradise Hills’: Costumes Kill in Feminist Dystopia

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/samuel_goldwyn/paradise-hills/paradise-hills-trailer-1_h1080p.mov
Official Trailer for “Paradise Hills”

“Paradise Hills” premiered at the Sundance Film Festival earlier this year. After the festival, Samuel Goldwyn Films acquired it for distribution. 

Samuel Goldwyn Films Brings Feminist Thriller From Sundance To Theaters on October 25th

The movie touts a novice creative team but an impressive cast of young actresses. Behind the camera is director Alice Waddington and behind the story are screenwriters Brian DeLeeuw and Nacho Vigalondo, none of whom have many noticeable credits to their names. The cast, however, has a few more familiar faces. It features Emma Roberts as the main character alongside Awkwafina, Danielle Macdonald, Milla Jovoich, and Eiza González.

The storyline focuses on a dystopian-like boarding school on an island. Young women wake up on this island and find themselves part of a social experiment, one that emotionally reforms them into becoming conformant members of their surroundings. Beneath the school’s idyllic surface, however, there is something threatening at hand, putting the girls in grave danger.

Mediocre Script, but Set & Costume Designs Save the Day

It sounds fascinating enough—almost like a modern YA-thriller rendition of the old British TV show, “The Prisoner.” Unfortunately, the script received heavy criticism at Sundance for having uncanny dialogue and numerous plot holes. What saved the film in most critics’ eyes were the set and costume designs. 

Laia Colet and Sol Saban respectfully did the film’s set design and decoration, and Alberto Valcárcel created the costumes. Together, they built a colorful world for the characters to live in. Aesthetically, it is somewhat Hunger Games-like with flamboyant outfits, unique hairstyles, and a constant futuristic feeling of lavishness. It is more than enough to grip the audience from a visual perspective.

A Win for Feminism, But Will its Delivery Suffice?

Another area where the film received some praise was for its feminism. While the script may have been a bit hollow, the female characters have an impressive degree of complexity. Critics recognized that the women in “Paradise Hills” went beyond simple archetypes, and offered an array of original voices. Given the film industry’s current climate with #MeToo and its systemic underrepresentation of female characters on screen, it is important to see this kind of depth given to a primarily female cast, especially under the influence of a female director and in a genre that is far from a chick-flick.

However, despite whatever political angles one takes or how progressive a movie is behind the scenes, films must speak for themselves as pieces of art and entertainment. If “Paradise Hills” fails on those fronts, then its more powerful layers may go unnoticed, and sadly, it may end up forgotten despite its best qualities.


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Brittany Runs A Marathon

https://movietrailers.apple.com/movies/independent/brittany-runs-a-marathon/brittany-runs-a-marathon-trailer-1_h1080p.mov
Official Preview Trailer for “Brittany Runs A Marathon”

Adroitly Handled Feel-Good Plot Showcases Jillian Bell and Paul Downs Colaizzo’s Dramedy Talents…

Have you ever seen a movie where the plot seems telegraphed by the title and yet, somehow, you still want to see how the twists and turns of the story get you there? And once you are in the mix and anticipating the somewhat obvious outcome, you find yourself thoroughly enjoying the journey?

That, in a nutshell is what Director Paul Downs Colaizzo, Jillian Bell (Brittany) along with cast and crew have achieved in “Brittany Runs A Marathon”.

The milieu is believable and the characters, based on “Brittanys” real life story as seen through the eyes of her then real-life roommate (Paul Downs Colaizzo), have an effortless familiarity, and that is all mixed with impeccable comic timing from veteran, Bell.

Not to say that this is all laughs and farce. There are real dramatic moments, adroitly handled by the Director and his lead actor.

Read More: Summer Books to Mark a Most Unusual Adventure and Unexpected Circumstance

Bell’s previous credits are an impressive list of a talented comedic character actor on the verge of breaking into bigger roles: “Curb Your Enthusiasm”, “Workaholics” and “Idiotsitter” on Comedy Central, for example. Her appearances on “22 Jump Street” led to Jonah Hill designating her “the funniest person I have ever met in my life.”

As with many New York based productions, the city also factors in as a character in the dramedy. The final act is, indeed, the moment when Brittany does attempt the run her NYC marathon. Again, although telegraphed and known as the clear destination for the story, it is nevertheless suspenseful and emotional once the audience has lived the journey with Brittany in order to get to the climax.

The Amazon funded project (let’s not hold that against them) won the Audience Award, (US Dramatic) at Sundance and appears to likely to do respectably at the box office with a tiered US roll out – on the two coasts starting August 23, 2019, and then nationwide by September 13th.


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