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Cinema Guild Goes on the Attack with 'Marwencol'

Posted by Eric Lavallee on May 05, 2010
Source: The Cinema Guild

The Cinema Guild have picked up the distrib rights to Jeff Malmberg’s Marwencol -- a docu film which premiered at the 2010 South by Southwest Film Festival where it won the Grand Jury Award for Best Documentary Feature. Cinema Guild will put the doc on their Fall slate, but before that the company will let the film continue on its winning ways on the film fest circuit this Summer.

If you don't feel like going through the synopsis below, you can listen to the director sort of revealing the idea and the process he employed after the jump below. On April 8, 2000, Mark Hogancamp was attacked outside of a bar in Kingston, NY, by five men who beat him literally to death. Revived by paramedics, Mark had suffered brain damage and physical injuries so severe even his own mother didn’t recognize him. When he emerged from his coma nine days after the attack he could barely walk, speak or remember anything from his previous life. Less than a year later, Mark’s state-supported physical, cognitive and occupational therapies ran out. He was 38, broke, living in a trailer and unable to work. And he was angry. He realized he had two choices: he could give up and “let those five guys win,” or he could take control of his own recovery.



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Reviews

Review: The Kid With a Bike

Review: The Kid With a Bike

"Despite the one-dimensionality of its anti-patriarchal theme (appeasing the knee-jerk expectations of European film fest audiences), the Dardennes avoid cheapening the story with ideological smugness, achieving an emotional resonance without easy sentimentality."


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Review: Wrong

"Encoded in the outlandish humor that pervades the film are bits of commentary on everyday life. The most overt is Dupieux's urging to appreciate the relationships around you, which is manifested in the dog kidnapping, but also in a subplot in which a woman from the pizzeria moves between men without even realizing they have changed. Another cultural critique is found in the rainy office, an instantly recognizable visual metaphor for how dreary a 9 to 5 job can be."


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