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Thursday,
August 21st at 7:30 p.m.
THE
FOOTSTEP MAN
Dir: Leon Narbey
Beautiful
filming brings to life late nineteenth-century Paris
and the paintings of Toulouse-Lautrec. Each scene begs
to be savoured
This is an ambitious feature which
succeeds well in incorporating two merging tales into
one movie. It is easily followed and engrossing from
start to finish. The Footstep Man fills a niche of art
house cinema rarely seen in New Zealand features. Bronwyn
Trudgeon, Capital Times
Whatever
you do, don't go to see The Footstep Man in the company
of someone with a large packet of potato chips. As one
would expect of a film about film-making, directed by
one of the leading lights of the New Zealand film industry,
The Footstep Man is a movie in which evocative use of
picture and sound - but especially sound - count for
a great deal
The transitions between film, and
film-within-film, are handled with all the confidence
and ease one expects of writer-director (and highly-regarded
cinematographer) Leon Narbey, whose Illustrious Energy
was one of our best movies yet. His latest effort works
best for the glimpses it provides into the fascinating
world of film-making - the magic involved in the process
of recreating the world; the way film-making, or indeed
any art, cannot only parallel, but start to consume
one's normal life; and the dangers of letting the screen
images take over from the real
the film has moments
of great beauty, plus originality.
Ian Pryor, The Evening Post
The
Footstep Man is an intriguing variation on the Purple
Rose of Cairo notion of a film character coming to life
scenes of the Foley artist at work, dubbing not only
footsteps but other soundtrack effects, are fascinating
Buffs should enjoy this inside look at the post-production
process. David Stratton, Variety
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