Category: Independent Film

  • 18½ : Fun With Watergate

    There are movies that draw you in, and there are movies that draw you in so much you forget the world around you. 18½ is so riveting and immersive that I forgot I was making a cup of tea and found a cup of cold, over-steeped leaf water after the final credits rolled.

    The iconic opening shot is of Connie Lashley (Willa Fitzgerald) in her car, listening to an announcer on the radio talk about how theories are continuing around the missing 18½ minutes on the Watergate tape. The world around Connie pans in an impossible direction behind her and Luis Guerra’s music swells in the background, enveloping us in the world of a 1970’s political thriller.

    18½‘s intricate plot is set up in the opening scene between Connie and Paul Marrow (John Magaro, an established reporter she’s asked to meet her. The paranoiac web of taped conference rooms maintained by the Nixon Administration has created a copy of the missing 18½ minutes that hard-working Office of Management and Budget (OMB) transcriptionist Connie has in her possession. Connie’s tape not only includes Nixon (Bruce Campbell) telling his Chief of Staff General Al Haig (Ted Raimi) that the tape of his June 20th 1972 discussion about the Watergate break-in with his prior chief of staff H.R. “Bob” Haldeman (Jon Cryer) needed to be destroyed, but it also contains the 18½ minute discussion itself. Connie tells Paul that no one knows the tape that she has with her exists and that she needs to return the tape by Monday morning. In other words, Connie has the missing 18 and a half minutes that everyone is talking about on a tape that’s in her purse.

    Connie and Paul negotiate, outlining a plan that will allow Connie to feel safe and maintain ownership of the tape while also allowing Paul to establish its veracity by listening to it, which requires a reel-to-reel tape player. They decide to check-in to the nearby Silver Sands Motel, a beachfront motel on the Chesapeake. As Connie and Paul introduce themselves as married couple Archie and Ruth to fellow cyclops and innkeeper Jack (Richard Kind), each lie they tell raises the stakes and notches up the tension.

    It is in this surreal other-world of the Silver Sands that we spend a majority of the film in, and the location served as one of the inspirations for the creation of the film itself. The well preserved, mid-century classic motel is located in NY, but the rich location filled with highly saturated pastel colors easily fills in for the Chesapeake beaches where I spent large portions of my youth.

    Paul (John Magaro) and Connie (Willa Fitzgerald) at the Silver Sands in 18½. Image used with permission. Photo Credit: Ellie Schneider, copyright Waterbug Eater Films.

    The world of Silver Sands Motel is peopled with strange characters that shift between zany and threatening — the bread-obsessed hippies might be a sex cult, the overly-friendly odd couple insisting on having dinner might be trying to start one, and the cyclops Jack seems to see (and say) both too much and not enough. Is the person fishing on the water looking for something other than fish? The music adds to this atmosphere, morphing a psychedelic 70’s track into hushed, suggestive tones.

    18½ never takes the viewer’s intelligence for granted. The well-written script ensures that context is given to the history and the moments for those that missed the headlines the first time around. Each detail serves a purpose (even the type of car Connie and Paul drive comes up in conversation). By the time that Connie and Paul are having dinner with eccentrics Samuel (Vondie Curtis Hall) and Lena (Catherine Curtin) I was alternating between laughing to release a bit of tension and laughing at the weird charm and humor of the scene because with all of its smarts, 18½ is also quite funny. From the situational humor that its vibrant and strange characters create to the jokes meant to break moments of tension, 18½ has a natural, sly humor that brings levity and a bit of release. The story allows for a variety of delightful performances from all of its actors.

    Director Dan Mirvish teamed up with writer Daniel Moya to create the script. The film began shooting in early spring of 2020, and were forced to pause after a mere 11 days of filming for the pandemic. The ingenuity that Dan and his team used to get 18½ completed was a story in itself (and included a lot of sourdough). Filmmaker Magazine as well as Variety both ran stories regarding the challenges of getting 18½ filmed during the pandemic.

    18½ has the spirit of a light-hearted heist, the plot of a political thriller, and the characters of a romantic comedy, which makes it charming in every way. 18½ is a fun movie about Watergate, which is an unexpected sentence to write. While Watergate might seem ‘stale’ or ‘boring’ by today’s political story standards, 18½ features a well-written, original story firmly rooted in its place and time — and it’s very effective at pulling the viewer into its world. It’s a fast-moving, fun romp through a turbulent political time that also invites us to ponder the deeper implications and possible parallels to our own time.

    18½ premiered at Woodstock Film Festival on October 2nd to a sold out audience, and will be having a Midwestern Premiere at the Tallgrass Film Festival October. The International Premiere for 18½ is at the Sao Paulo International Film Festival (aka Mostra). The best way to keep up with what is going on with the movie and how to see it is at Dan Mirvish’s website for the movie, https://danmirvish.com/18-1-2.

    I, for one, will be watching for news on a soundtrack release.

    Independent Film

    Indie Film

    Independent Film Review

    Film Reviews

    Indie Film Review

  • My Induction into “The Secret Society for Slow Romance”

    I was privileged to spend part of the pandemic watching the creation of The Secret Society for Slow Romance unfold on social media, and was absolutely thrilled to get a chance to be one of the earliest screeners for the movie. While I was worried about how Sujewa Ekanyake’s movie would handle a comedic romance during a global pandemic, I was delighted to find that it dealt with the pandemic (and a variety of deep subjects) with a heavy dose of wit and a sprinkle of intelligent, disarming earnestness. The movie is like a warm, cozy blanket — soothing and comfortable, and good for uplifting spirits. Ultimately, The Secret Society for Slow Romance is a cozy love note to cinema, independent film-making, and New York City.

    Sujewa Ekanayake as Rene and Alia Lorae as Allyson in The Secret Society for Slow Romance. Image Copyright 2021 Sujewa Ekanayake. Used with permission.

    I can’t be sure of how I initially started following independent filmmaker Sujewa on social media, but it probably has to do with our shared love of David Lynch (and an admiration for what Dune was). I was certain I’d watch anything he made once I watched his incredible slow cinema comedic noir “Werewolf Ninja Philosopher.

    On the most fundamental level, The Secret Society for Slow Romance is a slow cinema romantic comedy that explores what happens when two extraordinary people go on a few dates in New York City. The slow cinema styling allows us to explore big questions and even larger answers as filmmakers Rene (Sujewa Ekanayake) and Allyson (Alia Lorae) share take-out, conversation, and beautiful views of New York City. Throughout the movie, shots are allowed to linger on interesting spaces, objects, and people — the soft, welcoming glow gives character to the camera itself, which should be no surprise in a movie focused on two filmmakers.

    Sujewa Ekanayake as Rene,Alia Lorae as Allyson in The Secret Society for Slow Romance. Image Copyright 2021 Sujewa Ekanayake. Used with permission.

    Rene and Allyson aren’t just any filmmakers. Scientific studies found Rene to be the Happiest Man in North America. Allyson was voted The Most Productive Person in NY City by an independent film site. Through conversational exploration of the differences in their approaches to independent movie making, as well as their respective interests, we’re invited to contemplate all that cinema has to offer the world and just what a vast scope the word ‘film’ encompasses.

    During the movie, Allyson and Rene talk about their ambitions in film, and it was wonderful to feel like I was in on conversations about some of the challenges of independent filmmaking.

    Alia Lorae as Allyson in The Secret Society for Slow Romance. Image Copyright 2021 Sujewa Ekanayake. Used with permission.

    “I never really thought of happiness as a goal to achieve, I just kind of thought of it as something that happens like other things in life.” — Allyson

    I found myself, more than once, jotting down pages of notes of what Rene thought we should all learn in junior high — the movie is so dense with philosophical concepts and film references that attempting to catalog them all is a feat in and of itself. The slow, easy timing of the movie and laugh out loud absurdist humor makes the dense material playful. This positive atmosphere permeates every moment of the film. While Rene often comments on his surprise that Allyson hasn’t encountered a concept, that surprise is never from a place of judgement. Allyson’s interest in the most independent and experimental of films doesn’t reject anything more popular. In other words — these two characters are too comfortable in their own skin to be bothered with that.

    While the bulk of the film is focused on time with Rene and Allyson together, it doesn’t mean that the world of The Secret Society for Slow Romance isn’t filled with interesting characters. Days after watching, I found myself wondering about the adventures of characters like Pyjama Jams and Tor. We also get to spend some time with Allyson in her space, dictating her thoughts to her phone ala Dale Cooper’s microcasettes. Every moment and space has thoughtful purpose, and gives these scenes space to breathe, reflect, and admire.

    The wonderful world of The Secret Society for Slow Romance. Image Copyright 2021 Sujewa Ekanayake. Used with permission.

    Because we spend so much time with Rene and Allyson together, it was refreshing to see them talking, listening, and reflecting with each other. While many films with philosophical concepts create talking-head vehicles for monologues, The Secret Society for Slow Romance remembers that it is, indeed, a romance — and space for conversation is important to such things. Questions are asked and answered with earnestness, and while the conversation topics can soar to incredible, elevated discussions exploring the nature of happiness, Rene and Allyson never take themselves or the subject matter too seriously. This is the rare sort of movie that allows you to curl up in a comfortable part of the world while still acknowledging the faults of that world.

    Yet, The Secret Society for Slow Romance isn’t satisfied with the boy meets girl plot. A Secret Society should have a loftier, larger project — one that could transform independent film making and ultimately end world poverty. But to understand how it all works, you need to see the movie, it’s worth it. Besides, Google won’t help you find that bit about Winston Churchill.

    The Secret Society For Slow Romance will be released in April 2022, and you can go to the official website, https://www.slowromancemovie.com, to track the film’s progress towards saving the world!