#feminist film

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“The 50 Yard Dash” (2015)

This quirky and silly mockumentary, starring two-time Silver Fox Award winner Kaitlyn Murphy, follows a day in the lives of twenty-something undergraduates. With graduation quickly approaching, college roommates and best friends Lauren and Allie must come to terms with their post-grad lives going in opposite directions. Directed by Rachael Black and Devin Barbaro, this short film explores the pressure and emotions of four years of college coming to a close, reminding us that the most important thing we’ll take away from our higher education is the memories we’ve made.

#short film    #college    #university    #graduation    #indie film    #independent film    #low budget    #low budget film    #graduating    #friends    #friendship    #female    #female leads    #feminism    #feminist    #feminist film    #filmmaking    #feminist filmmaker    #comedy    #improv    #mockumentary    #the office    #parks and rec    #parks and recreation    #marist    #marist college    #film production    
The WitchDOP –Jarin Blaschke Format - Arri Alexa 4:3Lenses - Bausch & Lomb Super Baltar LensesThe WitchDOP –Jarin Blaschke Format - Arri Alexa 4:3Lenses - Bausch & Lomb Super Baltar LensesThe WitchDOP –Jarin Blaschke Format - Arri Alexa 4:3Lenses - Bausch & Lomb Super Baltar LensesThe WitchDOP –Jarin Blaschke Format - Arri Alexa 4:3Lenses - Bausch & Lomb Super Baltar LensesThe WitchDOP –Jarin Blaschke Format - Arri Alexa 4:3Lenses - Bausch & Lomb Super Baltar LensesThe WitchDOP –Jarin Blaschke Format - Arri Alexa 4:3Lenses - Bausch & Lomb Super Baltar LensesThe WitchDOP –Jarin Blaschke Format - Arri Alexa 4:3Lenses - Bausch & Lomb Super Baltar LensesThe WitchDOP –Jarin Blaschke Format - Arri Alexa 4:3Lenses - Bausch & Lomb Super Baltar LensesThe WitchDOP –Jarin Blaschke Format - Arri Alexa 4:3Lenses - Bausch & Lomb Super Baltar Lenses

The Witch

DOP Jarin Blaschke
Format - Arri Alexa 4:3
Lenses - Bausch & Lomb Super Baltar Lenses, Panavision Super Speeds
Aspect Ratio - 1.66 : 1
Delivery- Digital Intermediate 2K

Notable Strengths – Framing, Colour, Art Direction, Composition, Use of Natural Light, Use of Set, Space Making, Pacing, Tension Building 


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Blood Orgy of the Leather Girls (1988)Directed by Meredith LucasDoomsy’s Rating: 93/100 (on my Great

Blood Orgy of the Leather Girls (1988)

Directed by Meredith Lucas

Doomsy’s Rating: 93/100 (on my Great Films list!)

A radical, punk explosion of feminine rage. 

I don’t even know how to describe this, other than it being absolutely essential viewing for riot grrrls and punk rock girls everywhere. This is certainly not an easy sell to a lot of people, as some of the production values are unquestionably shaky, but director Meredith Lucas and producer Jon Jost (yes, Jon Jost!) make up for it with some aggressive and hyperkinetic cinematography and stream-of-consciousness editing, not to mention a BANGING score. Lucas is demonstrably a fan of the Russ Meyer school of empowerment, but with a firmly lesbian-gaze toward her protagonists. Everything about this film is caricatured to the point of becoming basically a cartoon. There’s loads of over-the-top comic-strip splattery violence (usually with the abhorrent men on the receiving end) and tons of scenes of the girls walking around carrying immense shotguns and wearing punk leather jackets and the whole movie just feels like the biggest riot grrrl recruitment ad I’ve ever seen (in the best way possible).

It’s interesting to note how the story is told from a male perspective (a clearly-defined attack on that gender’s perceptions of women as a threat to their own insecurities), as all the men depicted are either buffoons, selfish pigs, or almost playing a comic-book level of misogyny in a villain-screaming-about-world-domination way. There’s sequences where the male narrator literally describes women as “another, more dangerous species” and it is through this satire that we understand not only the brilliantly self-deprecating style of Lucas (not unlike Jon Moritsugu’s attack on L.A. culture’s historically despicable treatment of Asian-Americans) where violence begets violence, but here in the fantasy world of The Leather Girls it is the women who hold all the power, and all the best weapons. This is fantastic lo-fi filmmaking, and simply a cult classic waiting for to be found. If you love punk cinema, feminism, Lizzie Borden, or any of the 80s underground, this is gonna hit all the notes you want.

Please, everyone reading this give it a watch. It’s so worth a viewing.


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