Reviews
"Good enough, in fact, that the film is still very, very good, perhaps even great; good enough that the film still works and the transition from romance to thriller is at once acutely noticed and seamless. It's stylish, fun, mysterious-- and, above all, highly recommended."
-- Tom Russell
"Blanc de Blanc is a rare thing, a nesting-box film that succeeds. Its about love stories and process of relationship itself as much as it is the narrative that unfolds in Jude's life. I'm glad I had the opportunity to watch it privately, to test it as hard as any one tests a suitor."
-- Jessica Fenlon, Digging Pitt
Completing a feature film is a small miracle in itself; doing most of it within a two week span is that much more impressive. The challenge serves as a way to get the filmmaker to let go of excuses and just make a feature film. There’s no time to second-guess yourself and no time to allow your project to fall into any sort of limbo. There’s also no time to fix, to edit, or to retool your film. If something doesn’t feel right while shooting or cutting—tough. You’ve got a feature to plow through. I imagine that the majority of the shooting and editing takes on a run-and-gun style just to get the darn thing completed. [1] To say the least, there will never be a #2wkfilm Avatar.
--Bohemian Cinema
-- Tom Russell
"Blanc de Blanc is a rare thing, a nesting-box film that succeeds. Its about love stories and process of relationship itself as much as it is the narrative that unfolds in Jude's life. I'm glad I had the opportunity to watch it privately, to test it as hard as any one tests a suitor."
-- Jessica Fenlon, Digging Pitt
Completing a feature film is a small miracle in itself; doing most of it within a two week span is that much more impressive. The challenge serves as a way to get the filmmaker to let go of excuses and just make a feature film. There’s no time to second-guess yourself and no time to allow your project to fall into any sort of limbo. There’s also no time to fix, to edit, or to retool your film. If something doesn’t feel right while shooting or cutting—tough. You’ve got a feature to plow through. I imagine that the majority of the shooting and editing takes on a run-and-gun style just to get the darn thing completed. [1] To say the least, there will never be a #2wkfilm Avatar.
--Bohemian Cinema