Here's to the Future! (2014)

ALL 12/13/2014 (en) Documentary 73 Min
  • Release
    12/13/2014
  • Production
  • Rotten tomato
    63%
  • Original title
    Here's to the Future!
  • Original language
    en
  • Production Cost
  • 0.00
    -

Overview

On a late-summer Sunday in 2011, a female director gathers a team of filmmakers, writers, musicians, artists, critics, and friends in an apartment to recreate a scene from Michael Curtiz's Depression-era drama The Cabin in the Cotton. Over plates of pasta and glasses of red wine, a round robin of non-professional actors take turns performing the same scene, again and again, In different permutations. With a freedom Influenced by pre--Code Hollywood, cameras, phones, and laptops are scattered around & set at almost every possible angle, documenting the action both in front of and behind the camera as it unfolds, from rehearsals to equipment adjustments to the banter between takes. An intimate. playful, and spontaneous look Into the collaborative cinematic process emerges. a snapshot of the filmmaker's perennial struggle to capture fleeting moments before the day (and light) slip away.

  1. Gina Telaroli

    Director

  2. Story

  3. Gina Telaroli

    Editor

  4. C. Mason Wells

    Producer



Currently available to stream, watch for free, rent, and buy in the United States. You can makes it easy to find out where you can legally watch your favorite movies & TV shows online.

Watch Channel

Casts

Full Cast & Crew

Casts : 11 , Crews : 4

Keyword

Here's to the Future! (2014) 73 Min

ALL 12/13/2014 (en)
Documentary
  • Release 12/13/2014
  • Production
  • Original title Here's to the Future!
  • en
  • Revenue0.00

Overview

On a late-summer Sunday in 2011, a female director gathers a team of filmmakers, writers, musicians, artists, critics, and friends in an apartment to recreate a scene from Michael Curtiz's Depression-era drama The Cabin in the Cotton. Over plates of pasta and glasses of red wine, a round robin of non-professional actors take turns performing the same scene, again and again, In different permutations. With a freedom Influenced by pre--Code Hollywood, cameras, phones, and laptops are scattered around & set at almost every possible angle, documenting the action both in front of and behind the camera as it unfolds, from rehearsals to equipment adjustments to the banter between takes. An intimate. playful, and spontaneous look Into the collaborative cinematic process emerges. a snapshot of the filmmaker's perennial struggle to capture fleeting moments before the day (and light) slip away.

  1. Gina Telaroli

    Director

  2. Story

  3. Gina Telaroli

    Editor

  4. C. Mason Wells

    Producer