
That being in a band is like being in a relationship is a point that Allison Anders and Kurt Voss Strutter makes very early and very clearly when rock-singer Brett (Flannery Lunsford) is left by his girlfriend, only to find out that his band is also falling apart. Left without a muse and fearing the loss of his creative outlet, he now goes on a romp throughout Los Angeles and its environs, trying to find meaning when all he needs to do is to let go of the past.
This turns out not to be all that easy, but Anders and Voss, who have previously collaborated on music-themed films Border Radio and Sugar Town, make it highly entertaining.
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Commercial prospects will be slim, though, mostly due to nostalgic touches that will delight the 30+ generation, but make the film almost inaccessible to the Miley Cyrus demographic leaving festivals and limited runs in urban markets as the only likely theatrical outlets.
Though set in the present, Strutter bends over backwards not too come across as too current: shot in crisp black-and-white by Voss himself, the film rarely features a cell phone, and shows areas of Los Angeles that must have clunkers-only permits, as nary a car seems to have come off the production line in the last twenty years. This makes for an interesting effect and adds after one has overcome an initial moment of confusion enormously to the viewing pleasure, since it gives the film a look and feel that is more cinematic and controlled than any attempt at capturing time and place could have been on a small budget.
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Anders and Voss are greatly helped in their effort by a fresh-faced and talented cast, led by Lunsford, whose quiet desperation always has the undertones of a guy almost ready to explode, with Elyse Hollander and Sara Ashley delivering charming supporting turns as friends trying to keep him just on the right side of crazy. The most interesting casting choice might be an omission, though: Bretts ex-girlfriend Justine, who is constantly talked about and referred to as very hot, is never seen giving her character the kind of presence that an actual actress would have been hard-pressed to create.
Chris Figlers and Aaron Rottinghams snappy editing moves the film along at a crisp pace, as does J. Mascis music.
Venue: Munich International Film Festival
Production company: French Fan Club Films
Cast: Flannery Lunsford, Dante Aliano-White, Elyse Hollander, Sara Ashley, Victoria Williams
Directors: Allison Anders, Kurt Voss
Screenwriter: Allison Anders, Kurt Voss
Producers: Allison Anders, Kurt Voss
Director of photography: Kurt Voss
Editor: Chris Figler, Aaron Rottinghaus
Music: J. Mascis
Sales agent: open
No rating, 86 minutes.






You may have heard some critics champion Jurassic World as "The best Jurassic Park sequel", some fans declare that it "brought them back to their childhood", and others who may have made the absurd claim, "It's better than the original". Don't believe the hype. Jurassic World is nowhere close to the best Jurassic Park sequel (Spielberg's own, The Lost World: Jurassic Park, will always have that title). It is not going to bring you back to your childhood, and it doesn't hold a candle to what Steven Spielberg and crew accomplished with the original Jurassic Park. In a time of dark, self-serious, and pretentious blockbusters such as last year's Dawn of the Planet of the Apes or Christopher Nolan's Dark Knight films, Jurassic World is a refreshingly light adventure flick, but let's not pretend this is anything groundbreaking. The fourth Jurassic Park movie remembers to have fun with its premise, but Spielberg's magic touch is still sorely missed.
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