Reviewed by Chris Allsop
(March 2011)
Directed by: Asiel Norton
Written by: Asiel Norton and Magdalena Zyzak
Starring: Lucy Adden, Toben Seymour and Mark Aaron
When the title for “Redland” appears on the screen with the stark power of a Rothko, you know you’re in for something primal.
The story, set against the backdrop of the Great Depression, involves an isolated family living among the redwoods of Oregon. Our first point of contact is Mary-Ann, the only daughter of three siblings. Cyndi Lauper sang that “Girls Just Want to Have Fun,” and if this was true in the frivolous ’80s, it’s a matter of life and death for Mary-Ann (Lucy Adden) as she struggles with the absolutism of her family’s suffocating patriarchy. She’s involved in a secret romance, and it’s a vital distraction from the endless diet of prayers, washing and thin stews — a doorway to...
(March 2011)
Directed by: Asiel Norton
Written by: Asiel Norton and Magdalena Zyzak
Starring: Lucy Adden, Toben Seymour and Mark Aaron
When the title for “Redland” appears on the screen with the stark power of a Rothko, you know you’re in for something primal.
The story, set against the backdrop of the Great Depression, involves an isolated family living among the redwoods of Oregon. Our first point of contact is Mary-Ann, the only daughter of three siblings. Cyndi Lauper sang that “Girls Just Want to Have Fun,” and if this was true in the frivolous ’80s, it’s a matter of life and death for Mary-Ann (Lucy Adden) as she struggles with the absolutism of her family’s suffocating patriarchy. She’s involved in a secret romance, and it’s a vital distraction from the endless diet of prayers, washing and thin stews — a doorway to...
- 3/8/2011
- by admin
- Moving Pictures Network
Reviewed by Chris Allsop
(March 2011)
Directed by: Asiel Norton
Written by: Asiel Norton and Magdalena Zyzak
Starring: Lucy Adden, Toben Seymour and Mark Aaron
When the title for “Redland” appears on the screen with the stark power of a Rothko, you know you’re in for something primal.
The story, set against the backdrop of the Great Depression, involves an isolated family living among the redwoods of Oregon. Our first point of contact is Mary-Ann, the only daughter of three siblings. Cyndi Lauper sang that “Girls Just Want to Have Fun,” and if this was true in the frivolous ’80s, it’s a matter of life and death for Mary-Ann (Lucy Adden) as she struggles with the absolutism of her family’s suffocating patriarchy. She’s involved in a secret romance, and it’s a vital distraction from the endless diet of prayers, washing and thin stews — a doorway to...
(March 2011)
Directed by: Asiel Norton
Written by: Asiel Norton and Magdalena Zyzak
Starring: Lucy Adden, Toben Seymour and Mark Aaron
When the title for “Redland” appears on the screen with the stark power of a Rothko, you know you’re in for something primal.
The story, set against the backdrop of the Great Depression, involves an isolated family living among the redwoods of Oregon. Our first point of contact is Mary-Ann, the only daughter of three siblings. Cyndi Lauper sang that “Girls Just Want to Have Fun,” and if this was true in the frivolous ’80s, it’s a matter of life and death for Mary-Ann (Lucy Adden) as she struggles with the absolutism of her family’s suffocating patriarchy. She’s involved in a secret romance, and it’s a vital distraction from the endless diet of prayers, washing and thin stews — a doorway to...
- 3/8/2011
- by admin
- Moving Pictures Magazine
Redland is an art film in the most literal and complimentary sense. Every frame of it looks like an Impressionist painting or an exquisite photograph, and the dialogue is overheard in snippets, the way you half-hear conversations when you're drifting to sleep. The story is non-linear and dreamlike. The film's substance, its actual content, is good, but its style is nothing short of astonishing.
The setting is a rural, isolated mountain home during the Great Depression. These are not the Waltons, though. The unnamed family is dirt-poor, living in a ramshackle house and barely staying ahead of starvation. They subsist on the few chickens and other animals kept on their property. You know the old cliché about how we were poor but we didn't know it, because we were happy? Not these people. These people are poor and miserable.
Worse, the teenage daughter, Mary-Ann (Lucy Adden), has been having a...
The setting is a rural, isolated mountain home during the Great Depression. These are not the Waltons, though. The unnamed family is dirt-poor, living in a ramshackle house and barely staying ahead of starvation. They subsist on the few chickens and other animals kept on their property. You know the old cliché about how we were poor but we didn't know it, because we were happy? Not these people. These people are poor and miserable.
Worse, the teenage daughter, Mary-Ann (Lucy Adden), has been having a...
- 6/14/2009
- by Eric D. Snider
- Cinematical
Editor’s Note: This is one of a series of interviews with directors whose films are screening at the 2009 CineVegas Film Festival. “Redland” (USA, 2008) Director: Asiel Norton Cast: Lucy Adden, Mark Aaron, Sean Thomas, Kathan Fors, Bernadette Murray, Toben Seymour As a family struggles to survive in rural isolation during the Great Depression, their daughter’s secret affair begins a journey into the unknown. What initially attracted you to filmmaking and …...
- 6/12/2009
- indieWIRE - People
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