Stars: Julia Ormond, Emma Draper, John Bach, Nancy Brunning, Cohen Holloway, Ava Keane, Gina Laverty | Written and Directed by Jake Mahaffy
Family reunions always seem to reveal skeletons in the closet, and Reunion is no different. What we get with this new horror though is a mystery and a ghost story that feels original and is well worth checking out.
When a pregnant women returns to her recently-deceased grandparents’ home to clear it out she finds her estranged mother is there waiting for her. With the house full of tension, it is not long before old ghosts from the past appear to push for the answer to a mystery from the past.
A haunted house movie that holds a mystery from the past is nothing new, but what is interesting is the mystery itself. The main character Ellie (Emma Draper) is a writer looking into witchcraft and its connection to modern science,...
Family reunions always seem to reveal skeletons in the closet, and Reunion is no different. What we get with this new horror though is a mystery and a ghost story that feels original and is well worth checking out.
When a pregnant women returns to her recently-deceased grandparents’ home to clear it out she finds her estranged mother is there waiting for her. With the house full of tension, it is not long before old ghosts from the past appear to push for the answer to a mystery from the past.
A haunted house movie that holds a mystery from the past is nothing new, but what is interesting is the mystery itself. The main character Ellie (Emma Draper) is a writer looking into witchcraft and its connection to modern science,...
- 4/8/2021
- by Paul Metcalf
- Nerdly
"When you get scared, just ring that and I'll be right there." Dark Sky Films has debuted an official trailer for a "psychological shocker" horror titled Reunion, from filmmaker Jake Mahaffy. This first premiered at the Nightstream Film Festival this fall, and it arrives on VOD in February. A pregnant woman returns to her recently-deceased grandparents' family home to spend time with her estranged mother. What begins as a reunion slowly turns terrifying. The film features Julia Ormond and Emma Draper, with John Bach, Nancy Brunning, and Cohen Holloway. It is built around a "tour-de-force performance of threateningly quiet intensity and features a twisty narrative that will burrow itself into the darkest corners of your mind." Scary. This is a super trippy trailer, with some intensely frightening camera angles and super creepy shots. Here's the official trailer (+ posters) for Jake Mahaffy's Reunion, direct from Dark Sky's YouTube: A pregnant...
- 12/23/2020
- by Alex Billington
- firstshowing.net
Halfway through The Patriarch (Mahana), young Simeon (Akuhata Keef) is enjoying a trip to the cinema that he’s fought hard for. His grandfather, Tamihana (Temuera Morrison), who rules undisputed over his extended Maori family, sees him as insubordinate and certainly would prefer the kids don’t “waste money on make-believe.” But Simeon loves westerns, and a town screening of 3:10 to Yuma is too good to pass up. Yet even Glenn Ford and Van Eflin’s march towards that train platform is derailed by intrusions from the real world, with a member of a rival family riding a horse into the cinema and an unexpected kiss opening up new perspectives in the ensuing confusion.
It’s a brief moment of autobiographical fun for director Lee Tamahori, who sprinkles bits of his own New Zealand upbringing on top of this adaptation of Witi Ihimaera’s novel Bulibasha: King of the Gypsies.
It’s a brief moment of autobiographical fun for director Lee Tamahori, who sprinkles bits of his own New Zealand upbringing on top of this adaptation of Witi Ihimaera’s novel Bulibasha: King of the Gypsies.
- 2/15/2016
- by Tommaso Tocci
- The Film Stage
Colorful performances and energetic direction can't quite make up for some truly banal, soapy scripting in "When Love Comes", a quirky, equal-opportunity love story.
Part of the Outfest '99 lineup, the New Zealand import isn't likely to woo many viewers beyond the festival circuit.
Rena Owen, who was so memorable as an abused wife In Lee Tamahori's "Once Were Warriors", does some fine character work here as Katie Keen, a down-at-the-heels pop diva whose Top 40 days are well behind her.
Reduced to performing her old hits at noisy bars -- her biggest claim to fame was a No. 1 song in America during the late '70s -- the New Zealand native attempts to thwart a threatening nervous breakdown by coming home to revisit her roots and write a one-woman show.
There to lend a ready shoulder to cry on is her longtime pal Stephen Simon Prast), who's having boyfriend trouble with Mark (Dean O'Gorman), a much younger, budding songwriter who spends most of his life in a drug-and-alcohol-tinged haze.
Having problems with commitment, Mark becomes even more confused when he meets up with Fig (Nancy Brunning) and Sally (Sophia Hawthorne), a pair of aspiring rockers. While drummer Fig is romantically involved with guitarist Sally, she also has a thing for Mark and his edgy lyrics.
To add to all the emotional complications, Katie's nice-guy American boyfriend/manager Eddie Simon Westaway) shows up unannounced and joins in all the dysfunctional festivities. He declares his love for her; she, of course, isn't sure what she wants.
Neither is filmmaker Garth Maxwell. While his direction has a nice visual zip, the script, which he wrote along with Rex Pilgrim and Peter Wells, is awash in self-indulgent characters who spend most of the time taking each other's emotional temperatures while still trying to be interesting and sympathetic. Their group analysis sessions may be therapeutic, but they don't do much for the hapless viewer.
Despite all the "woe is me" dialogue, the cast, following Owen's very capable example, nevertheless manages to create an appealing, sexually diverse landscape that has been vibrantly captured on film by cinematographer Darryl Ward, who makes his feature debut here after a successful career in music videos and commercials.
WHEN LOVE COMES
Jour De Fete Films
MF Films in association with
the New Zealand Film Commission
Director: Garth Maxwell
Screenwriters: Garth Maxwell, Rex Pilgrim, Peter Wells
Director of photography: Darryl Ward
Production designer: Grace Mok
Editor: Cushla Dillon
Costume designer: Kirsty Cameron
Music: Chris Anderton
Color/stereo
Cast:
Katie: Rena Owen
Mark: Dean O'Gorman
Stephen: Simon Prast
Fig: Nancy Brunning
Sally: Sophia Hawthorne
Eddie: Simon Westaway
Running time -- 94 minutes
No MPAA rating...
Part of the Outfest '99 lineup, the New Zealand import isn't likely to woo many viewers beyond the festival circuit.
Rena Owen, who was so memorable as an abused wife In Lee Tamahori's "Once Were Warriors", does some fine character work here as Katie Keen, a down-at-the-heels pop diva whose Top 40 days are well behind her.
Reduced to performing her old hits at noisy bars -- her biggest claim to fame was a No. 1 song in America during the late '70s -- the New Zealand native attempts to thwart a threatening nervous breakdown by coming home to revisit her roots and write a one-woman show.
There to lend a ready shoulder to cry on is her longtime pal Stephen Simon Prast), who's having boyfriend trouble with Mark (Dean O'Gorman), a much younger, budding songwriter who spends most of his life in a drug-and-alcohol-tinged haze.
Having problems with commitment, Mark becomes even more confused when he meets up with Fig (Nancy Brunning) and Sally (Sophia Hawthorne), a pair of aspiring rockers. While drummer Fig is romantically involved with guitarist Sally, she also has a thing for Mark and his edgy lyrics.
To add to all the emotional complications, Katie's nice-guy American boyfriend/manager Eddie Simon Westaway) shows up unannounced and joins in all the dysfunctional festivities. He declares his love for her; she, of course, isn't sure what she wants.
Neither is filmmaker Garth Maxwell. While his direction has a nice visual zip, the script, which he wrote along with Rex Pilgrim and Peter Wells, is awash in self-indulgent characters who spend most of the time taking each other's emotional temperatures while still trying to be interesting and sympathetic. Their group analysis sessions may be therapeutic, but they don't do much for the hapless viewer.
Despite all the "woe is me" dialogue, the cast, following Owen's very capable example, nevertheless manages to create an appealing, sexually diverse landscape that has been vibrantly captured on film by cinematographer Darryl Ward, who makes his feature debut here after a successful career in music videos and commercials.
WHEN LOVE COMES
Jour De Fete Films
MF Films in association with
the New Zealand Film Commission
Director: Garth Maxwell
Screenwriters: Garth Maxwell, Rex Pilgrim, Peter Wells
Director of photography: Darryl Ward
Production designer: Grace Mok
Editor: Cushla Dillon
Costume designer: Kirsty Cameron
Music: Chris Anderton
Color/stereo
Cast:
Katie: Rena Owen
Mark: Dean O'Gorman
Stephen: Simon Prast
Fig: Nancy Brunning
Sally: Sophia Hawthorne
Eddie: Simon Westaway
Running time -- 94 minutes
No MPAA rating...
- 7/22/1999
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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