Fall and Spring
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Camera (color/B&W, 16mm), Brent Meeske; editor, Eric Archer; music, Brandon Beckner; production design, Michael Reinis; sound, Sobel, Beckner. Reviewed at Sequoia 1, Mill Valley, Oct. 13, 1996. (In Mill Valley Film Festival.) Running time: 96 MIN.
With: Jason Cottle, Michael Healey, Beth Kitchen, Nicole Von Reisen, Mark Theodorff, Andrew Pawlek, Roxy Morganstern, Dennis Manz. Amerindie Gen X drama Fall and Spring impresses most in its resourceful, if not ultimately successful, efforts to technically rise above low budget. What it lacks, however, is the one thing that neednt cost a cent: a story thats worth telling. Pic will serve best as calling card for young helmer Steven Sobel. Script was improvised during shoot, a risky move whose pitfalls are fully displayed onscreen. Present-day action reunites 20-ish Dillard Cadix (Jason Cottle) and Chet Blume (Michael Healey) in their smallish, generic hometown anytown. (Exteriors were shot in Oregon, other scenes in Sobels UC Santa Barbara base, using student talent.) Dillards rock band is on the verge of breaking. But hes combative, irrational and self-destructive in dealings with the L.A. recording industry scout (Mark Theodorff) who wants to assure their success. Collegian Chet is morose in wake of his parents recent death in an accident, though this last element is scarcely explained or developed. Neither are subsidiary characters, which include Dillards pregnant ex-g.f. Tanya (Nicole Von Reisen). Much time is eaten up by flashbacks to the protags childhood friendship: Reckless Dillard was raised by an alcoholic dad and abusive stepmom.
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