A father has to go and kill one more time; his son has to deal with the consequences.A father has to go and kill one more time; his son has to deal with the consequences.A father has to go and kill one more time; his son has to deal with the consequences.
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Featured reviews
A visceral energy pushes through this film as a juxtaposition of troubled histories bubble below the surface of mental and physical landscapes. This is a raw film with not only a brooding intensity around it but also containing an undercurrent of uncertainty, distrust and menace. Polarities of alienation and longing, love and sorrow permeate the principal characters in a setting which affords degrees of anonymity and distance. The film's spare and enigmatic aura gives space to the various relationships where time and past events impact on the present. It breaks boundaries and sets up new markers in creating situations where pursuit and emotion collide to produce fragile new directions. To ask whether this film works in a traditional sense is to miss the point. Here is a created work which punches at the margins, reminding the audience that there are still new ways to tell a story.
I had little idea what was going on, but I didn't really care either. No redeeming features anywhere to be found, a waste of time.
A movie just like a DeLorean, seemed like a good idea at the time. It's a complete shambles from start to finish, the only joy I got was knowing the director hasn't done another movie since.
Cinematography wildly overdone, script wildly underdone, acting so-so, verdict: film school end-of-year project.
Very interesting film.
This isn't made in the way that probably most of the films you've already seen have been, but appears to be very much the film that Martin Radich wanted to make (if you've seen or read any of the interviews about this project). The official plot synopsis is probably quite misleading, however, the 78 minute running time should be the biggest clue that it isn't going as straightforward as the summary would suggest.
There isn't a vast amount of dialogue, which means the majority of the exposition is done through the body language and facial expressions of the actors, who all do this wonderfully. If you are looking to take a film at face value, Norfolk will not work for you as it doesn't appear to have done for the other reviewers.
If you want to unpack what's going on in the film, you need to figure out how what you're seeing feels to you - then it makes sense. This is definitely a refreshing approach to the medium, but certainly not for everyone.
This isn't made in the way that probably most of the films you've already seen have been, but appears to be very much the film that Martin Radich wanted to make (if you've seen or read any of the interviews about this project). The official plot synopsis is probably quite misleading, however, the 78 minute running time should be the biggest clue that it isn't going as straightforward as the summary would suggest.
There isn't a vast amount of dialogue, which means the majority of the exposition is done through the body language and facial expressions of the actors, who all do this wonderfully. If you are looking to take a film at face value, Norfolk will not work for you as it doesn't appear to have done for the other reviewers.
If you want to unpack what's going on in the film, you need to figure out how what you're seeing feels to you - then it makes sense. This is definitely a refreshing approach to the medium, but certainly not for everyone.
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Details
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- Budget
- £350,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 23 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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