News
Canvas Review from Creepy Bonfire
Canvas, directed by Melora Donoghue and Kimberly Stuckwisch, hit the screen at the Chattanooga Film Festival, leaving horror fans intrigued and captivated. This film dives deep into the tumultuous relationship between two sisters, brought together after years of estrangement. Raised to believe that true artistry stems from suffering, they confront their past and the influence of their tyrannical father.
The plot centers around two sisters who have been pitted against each other since childhood. Reunited after years apart, one sister learns the value of authenticity while the other grapples with regret. Their story is a complex dance of reconciliation and rivalry, all under the shadow of their father’s oppressive expectations.
Read the full review at creepybonfire.com
Low Road Films: Executive Producers for Go Away
The indie film, written and directed by Ed Kear and Cringo Williamson through their production banner Rude Guests, has started production in Heltfordshire, U.K.
Go Away! follows the deadbeat lodger Kyle Burden, played by Socha, as his life is turned upside down when an accident with a bailiff on the same day his landlord has viewings with potential home buyers threatens to derail his pot-growing business.
Read the full article at hollywoodreporter.com
Canvas Review from Morbidly Beautiful
Two young sisters, Eve and Marissa, are painting a landscape before a breathtaking waterfall. Their domineering father lords over them, mercilessly ridiculing Marissa for her lackluster, uninspired brush strokes.
He forces Eve to set fire to Marissa’s canvas, insisting “the seed of creativity is adversity.”
Flash forward many years, and adult Marissa (Bridget Regan), now a struggling professional artist, is elegant and poised but cold and disillusioned by life. Marissa expresses anger that Eve (Joanne Kelly) inherited her father’s entire estate after his passing, including 80 million dollars of coveted art that she just announced she intends to donate to a local art gallery owned by the fiancée of her treasured childhood friend, Cormack (Alain Uy).
Read the full review at morbidlybeautiful.com
Canvas Wins Two Awards @ the 2024 Hill Country Film Festival!
Low Road Films is proud to announce that our film Canvas has won Cinema Dulce-Best of Fest and Best Feature Film at the 2024 HCFF!
More information can be found at hillcountryff.com
‘Rise And Shine’: Co-Produced by Low Road Films
Low Road Films is proud to announce that Randy Wooten is a co-producer on the upcoming film ‘Rise And Shine’.
More information can be found on the Deadline website, at Deadline.com
Canvas Accepted to Hill Country Film Festival
Low Road Films is proud to announce we are an Official Selection for the 2024 Hill Country Film Festival.
This year’s event is May 30-June 2,2024 in Fredericksburg.
More information can be found on the HCFF website, at Hill Country Film Festival
Canvas Accepted to Chattanooga Film Festival
Low Road Films is proud to announce we are an Official Selection for the 2024 Chattanooga Film Festival.
This year’s event is June 21-28, 2024.
More information can be found on the CFF website, at Chattanooga Film Festival
Pass The Remote: ‘Shift,’ ‘Canvas,’ ‘Lousy Carter,’ ‘The Fox,’ Agnés Varda Films
By RANDY MYERS| Correspondent – Bay City News
Here’s good news for those unable to attend this year’s Silicon Valley’s Cinequest Film & Creativity Festival. Cinejoy, the fest’s streaming arm underway through March 31, is packed with splashy titles.
This week, we recommend a few Cinejoy flicks, as well as cover Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive’s exciting Viva Varda series; a one-night-only screening of the acerbic comedy “Lousy Carter” at the Roxie in San Francisco; and a not-to-miss streaming find, “The Fox.”
Want another thrill? The Gaslight”-like “Canvas” from directors Melora Donoghue and Kimberly Stuckwisch gets the heart pounding. Bridget Regan certainly makes a fine villain, as an artistically challenged New York painter who returns home to prey on her much more talented, agoraphobic sister (Joanne Kelly). “Canvas,” no paint-by-numbers dysfunctional family thriller, has numerous good performances.
Cinequest 2024: Catch these 10 films at huge San Jose festival
By RANDY MYERS | Correspondent – The Mercury News
Cinequest serves up world premieres (66 of ‘em!) in an impressive 217-film program program that’s poised to make major cinematic waves in Silicon Valley March 6-17.
The festival’s theme this year is “Uplift.”
“Canvas” (from Low Road Films)
Bereft of legit artistic talent, New Yorker Marissa (Bridget Regan) slithers her way back to her hometown where she makes the reclusive life of her eccentric but brilliant painter sister Eve (Joanne Kelly) absolute hell. What’s driving her to get addled sis committed? Perhaps dead dad’s pricey art collection might figure in. Directors Melora Donoghue – who also cowrote the sleek screenplay – and Kimberly Stuckwisch turn up the gaslight to extra high for this engrossing, finely tuned Gothic-lite thriller. It receives a world premiere.
Screenings:
7:15 p.m. March 15 at California Theatre, San Jose;
9:30 p.m. March 17 at Hammer Theatre Center, San Jose.
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