Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Northern Comfort

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
7.2
/
10
1
Votes
Alchetron
7.2
1 Ratings
100
90
80
71
60
50
40
30
20
10
Rate This

Rate This

Duration
  

Director
  
Rod Webber

Genre
  
Drama

7/10
IMDb

Initial release
  
2010

Running time
  
1h 15m

Cast
  
Greta Gerwig, Rod Webber

Writer
  
Joseph James Bellamy, Greta Gerwig, David T. Grophear, Irina Peligrad, Rod Webber

Similar movies
  
Hell Harbor (1930), The Idol Dancer (1920), Pecks Bad Boy (1934), All My Sons (1948), She Goes to War (1929)

Children of bodom northern comfort


Northern Comfort is a 2010 American improvisational film starring Rod Webber and Greta Gerwig. Shot primarily in three days for a paltry three thousand dollars, the film is the second of Webber's films based on a manifesto which has been likened to DIY Dogme films which use limited equipment and other resources in an attempt to create an atmosphere of realism not present in most traditional schools of film-making. The Boston Globe’s Ty Burr called it "DIY Dogme dedicated to Webber’s guiding maxim: 'The movie already exists, it’s just waiting to be found.’" During an interview for Gerwig's Greenberg starring Ben Stiller (Gerwig's first mainstream movie) she was asked whether she'd be doing more films for $3000 and replied, "[Laughs] Maybe not $3,000 budgets but maybe $50,000 budgets. I'm interested in making low-budget films not for the sake of making low-budget films but because a lot of filmmakers that I want to work with and that I like are working on a smaller scale."

Contents

Dr rubberfunk northern comfort feat john turrell


Synopsis

The film tells the story of Horace (Webber) and Cassandra (Gerwig) who meet while traveling to Canada. The pair skirt around their feelings as Gerwig deals with an illness which she's keeping to herself. "Because they’re damaged in similar ways — we learn they’re both the black sheep of their respective families — they make for sweet-and-sour traveling companions, or would if Cassandra didn’t keep disappearing on Horace. The people they meet on the road offer varying object lessons in coping with the disaster of living. A comically mismatched couple at a roadside motel (Joseph James Bellamy and Irina Peligrad) seem ready to seduce our heroes or at least drag them into a discussion of superheroes as modern gods. A hermit (Markus Nechay) offers Horace and Cassandra beds for the night, a musical interlude, and a glimpse of one man’s sad isolation. The closest the movie gets to a statement comes from an older man in a diner (Robert Koch) who locates nirvana in the act of tying flies."

Critique

The Boston Globe described the film as "a tiny movie that casts a tiny but genuine spell."

Paul Ryan of the Weekly Dig draws several comparisons between Webber and big budget director James Cameron saying, "God knows what James Cameron makes his movies for," says filmmaker Rod Webber. There are real awkward moments, real distress and very little CGI as the pair bumbles their way through the plot, meets real people along the way, awkwardly waxing philosophy and never mentioning their feelings to each other, while being filmed. All of which makes Webber, decidedly anti-James Cameron."

Reel Fest

Northern Comfort premiered at Reel Fest. Reel Fest 2 was May 28 to June 2, 2010.

References

Northern Comfort Wikipedia
Northern Comfort IMDb