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Cinema Purgatorio

Cinema Purgatorio (2014)

June. 01,2014
|
8.1
| Comedy

In a last-ditch effort to break through in the crowded and convoluted indie film world, a husband-wife producing team make a film especially designed to win a regional film festival and attract the attention of actor Bill Murray.

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Reviews

GazerRise
2014/06/01

Fantastic!

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Stoutor
2014/06/02

It's not great by any means, but it's a pretty good movie that didn't leave me filled with regret for investing time in it.

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BelSports
2014/06/03

This is a coming of age storyline that you've seen in one form or another for decades. It takes a truly unique voice to make yet another one worth watching.

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Billy Ollie
2014/06/04

Through painfully honest and emotional moments, the movie becomes irresistibly relatable

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Abe Duenas
2014/06/05

This is a great film with genuine laughs. You will fall in love with the Characters and will be left an appetite for more. Trying to catch the attention of Bill Murray that is judging a 48 hour film festival, the Shaw's scramble to assemble their crew and give it one last shot before having to settle down and get real jobs. You feel wanting to be a part of the eccentric film crew the Shaw's put together for this heist they are on. Years from now you will put Cinema Purgatorio as one of the films that catapulted yet another filmmakers career to the next level. Right up there with Bottle Rocket and El Mariachi. Not only does this film give us a heartfelt story that we can get behind, but also reminds us that true success is not measured by dollar signs.

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cjbwebbusiness-1
2014/06/06

CINEMA PURGATORIO was written, directed, and produced by folks who clearly have lived through (still living in?) the suffrage and anguish of indie film - yup: cinema purgatory. Pleasant, at times, painful throughout, PURGATORY puts you in the back seat as bona fide filmmakers navigate their way through the "f*cking" world of film festivals and indie film production. Constantly mocked, dismissed, and rarely taken seriously, the main characters, a filmmaking husband/wife team, Neil and Liz, do all they can to keep their filmmaking hopes alive, including a desperate attempt to win over actor Bill Murray by entering a novelty "48 hour" film competition. And as they faithfully go forth, it seems everyone has filmmaking advice to give, including a couple of mismatched knuckleheads outside a snow cone stand: "What are the three genres of independent feature films that always, always make money? Horror. Christian. And Gay!"

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paparidgeback
2014/06/07

From the film's abrupt first frame, farcical mise-en-scène from South Carolina filmmaking duo Chris and Emily White, Cinema Purgatorio seamlessly transports movie-goers from the audience's familiar, optimistic and comfortable side of the silver screen to the dark, occasionally vicious, back-stabbing and frustration filled terrain of independent movie-making, an ego-blistered nest inhabited by imperfect personalities known as "filmmakers;" fallible and occasionally eccentric dreamers whose first thought upon waking is most likely concerned with how to make and finish their next film.Mainstream audiences may be surprised to discover movies are not menu items ordered from Hollywood film factories for same-day delivery to the local multiplex. Before any film can begin there must be a vision, and before the vision must come a hopeful player willing to fill the role of the filmmaker. The long road from concept to premiere is choked with production pot holes, career land mines and control compromises, and it is the Herculean task of the independent filmmaker to oversee, nurture and shepherd his or her project through to completion. Obviously, completion in itself does not guarantee financial, critical or career success.Few Hollywood films turn out to much resemble the screenwriter's initial concept, which explains why independent films hold such an allure for aspiring filmmakers. But while the lowly independent filmmaker may occasionally benefit the most from an individual project's success and parlay an individual success to the Hollywood big leagues, more often than not it's the resource-poor filmmaker who pays the heaviest ... and most personal and enduring ... price for failure.A 2012 study suggests that while fewer than 10% of Hollywood releases show a profit, only .1% of independent films will recoup their cost of production. Given these emotional perils and the financial risks inherent in the filmmaking business, the general question "Why are so many films so bad?" better becomes "Given the obstacles and the stress involved, how can anyone expect to make a good film and have his or her film earn widespread distribution? Stepping back and looking at the odds of success makes us wonder who in their right mind would willingly submit themselves to the inevitable frustrations and disappointment ... not to mention the angst and despair ... of committing themselves to producing an independent (i.e. non-Hollywood) film?Cinema Purgatorio pushes the movie-making curtain aside and presents a comedic look at the sausage-making process whereby stories are conceived, ideas are hatched, scripts brought to life by actors, individual takes are filmed by cinema-photographers, voices are captured by sound recordists, scenes are edited and movies are assembled from hundreds of hours of tapes to finally become a feature-length 90 minute film. Through this tedious process personal relationships will sour, financial investments will spoil, egos will shatter, dreams will vanish, promises will be broken and careers smashed and abandoned. Cinema Purgatorio takes us there to see all of it.The focus is not the processes and arcane mechanics of movie-making, however. Cinema Purgatorio unflinchingly shares the "life processes" of the individuals involved in the process, the producers/writers/directors and the actors and the crew members whose combined spirits coalesce into an emotional momentum pugnaciously advancing the film from uncertain dream to opening night.No need to recount the film's truly funny scenes, or to describe the zany characters or to re-hash specific punch lines: see the movie and find out for yourself instead, because the actors quickly engage us in the quirky characters and in the sometimes exigent circumstances responsible for bringing their uneven lives together. Eric Barnhart's remarkable original score deserves special mention, as does the selection of scenic locations in Charleston and Folley Beach, South Carolina.SPOILER ALERT ******************************** tab down to next row of asterisks to skip the SPOILER AHEAD Several reviewers have described the film's characters as likable. I have to disagree, particularly regarding the character of Neil's wife, Liz. In O. Henry's short story "The Gift of The Magi" the poor young couple make mutual, secret sacrifices to selflessly surprise the other with Christmas gifts. But Liz's unilateral action is of a different nature entirely.Return from Spoiler Alert ************************************************* Cinema Purgatorio succeeds in colorfully depicting the filmmakers' creative cleansing ... the penance of enduring career frustrations, financial uncertainties, creative despair and spiritual hopelessness, the inexplicable randomness and perpetual wheel spinning ... the "purgatorio" ... intrinsic to the pursuit of filmmaking ("cinema") perfection. Its gaggle of disparate characters ultimately discover the healing power of love and the aegis of grace essential for surviving tribulations with spouses, children, ex-lovers, peers and even enemies and the occasional buffoon, too.And that makes Cinema Purgatorio essential viewing.

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Susie Johann
2014/06/08

I attended the North Carolina premier of this movie last night, and absolutely loved it. The basic premise is that two marginally-successful film makers (who are also married to one another) decide to make a last-ditch effort before possibly throwing the towel in and opting to get "real jobs." The story was about the "human condition", and was, in turn, inspiring, poignant, and hilarious. The acting was first-rate; each character sprang from honesty and was entirely believable. Each character had his/her "turn", and made the most of it; but Lavin Cuddihee has a scene about 2/3 of the way through the film that had the entire audience laughing uncontrollably. This is a very fun and enjoyable movie, and I'd recommend it.

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