Recently, CBS released the new,official synopsis/spoilers for their upcoming "Blue Bloods" episode 17 of season 5. The episode is entitled, "Occupational Hazards," and it turns out that we're going to see some very dramatic and intense stuff go down when Erin's apartment gets broken into, along with her coworker getting harmed, and more! In the new, 17th episode press release: Erin is going to be rattled when an unknown assailant breaks into her apartment and also attacks her coworker. Press release number 2: Erin will be rattled when an unknown assailant breaks into her apartment and also attacks her co-worker. In the meantime, Jamie and Eddie are going to discover a pipe bomb in an elderly woman's apartment, and Frank will look into a charity that is soliciting money for the NYPD. Guest stars feature: Staci-Lyn Charles (Morgan), Phyllis Somerville (Beth), Yohance Myles (Det. Baldikowski), Tina Benko, (Lauren Vickers), Annunziata Gianzero...
- 2/20/2015
- by Eric
- OnTheFlix
Opens Friday, Feb. 28
The cliches gather faster than the Cape Cod mists in "Dischord" (sic), an atmospheric but insufferably soapy drama that asks the question: Can a pair of creatively stifled married musicians find harmony in an isolated cabin, especially with the unexpected arrival of the husband's estranged, psychotic brother?
Directed, written, edited and produced by award-winning short-film maker Mark Wilkinson, the no-budget picture scrapes together some effectively moody production value for the money, but it can never get past the musty story line and secondhand dialogue.
Meet Gypsy (Annunziata Gianzero), a lovely looking alt-rock violinist who hangs up her bow and goes AWOL on the eve of a world tour. Jaded by the nasty commercialism that has tainted the purity of her best musical intentions, she flees with her New Age composer husband Lucian (Andrew Borba) to his remote, off-season Cape Cod cabin, where she hopes to get back in touch with her inner gypsy.
As if the egotistical Lucian isn't having enough trouble trying to write a follow-up to a hit CD that prominently featured his wife's input, he also has to contend with a strained visit from his long-lost, tormented brother, Jimmy Thomas Jay Ryan), who shows up at the cabin fresh from having just beaten his girlfriend to death and dumping her in the river.
By showing this sordid bit of business at the beginning of the film, Wilkinson has robbed it of a valuable is-he-or-isn't-he (a psycho murderer) tension. Instead, he tosses in a less effective ticking-bomb element in the form of a retired detective (Dick Bakalyan) who picks up Jimmy's trail and will hopefully get to him before he kills again.
Even without that element of mystery, "Dischord" puts a strain on viewer involvement with the kind of bland, two-dimensional lead characters who are known to spill their guts out to dippy, all-seeing beachcombers while expressing the desire to be able to fly and dream again.
It's a shame they didn't have more interesting things to say and do, because cinematographer Ernst Kubitza managed to convincingly evoke that restless New England winter gloom despite the considerable time and budget constrictions, while John McCarthy's nicely subdued score compensates for some of the script's shriller passages.
DISCHORD
Artistic License Films
Ivy Media Group
Credits:
Director-screenwriter-producer-editor: Mark Wilkinson
Director of photography: Ernst Kubitza
Production designers: Natacha Alpert, Erica Switzer
Costume designers
Dane Peterson, Hana Rausalova, Maria Sparagna
Music: John McCarthy
Cast:
Jimmy: Thomas Jay Ryan
Gypsy: Annunziata Gianzero
Detective Dunbarton: Dick Bakalyan
Lucian: Andrew Borba
The Beachcomber: Rick Wessler
Billy Dunbarton: Michael DeLuise
Running time -- 102 minutes
No MPAA rating...
The cliches gather faster than the Cape Cod mists in "Dischord" (sic), an atmospheric but insufferably soapy drama that asks the question: Can a pair of creatively stifled married musicians find harmony in an isolated cabin, especially with the unexpected arrival of the husband's estranged, psychotic brother?
Directed, written, edited and produced by award-winning short-film maker Mark Wilkinson, the no-budget picture scrapes together some effectively moody production value for the money, but it can never get past the musty story line and secondhand dialogue.
Meet Gypsy (Annunziata Gianzero), a lovely looking alt-rock violinist who hangs up her bow and goes AWOL on the eve of a world tour. Jaded by the nasty commercialism that has tainted the purity of her best musical intentions, she flees with her New Age composer husband Lucian (Andrew Borba) to his remote, off-season Cape Cod cabin, where she hopes to get back in touch with her inner gypsy.
As if the egotistical Lucian isn't having enough trouble trying to write a follow-up to a hit CD that prominently featured his wife's input, he also has to contend with a strained visit from his long-lost, tormented brother, Jimmy Thomas Jay Ryan), who shows up at the cabin fresh from having just beaten his girlfriend to death and dumping her in the river.
By showing this sordid bit of business at the beginning of the film, Wilkinson has robbed it of a valuable is-he-or-isn't-he (a psycho murderer) tension. Instead, he tosses in a less effective ticking-bomb element in the form of a retired detective (Dick Bakalyan) who picks up Jimmy's trail and will hopefully get to him before he kills again.
Even without that element of mystery, "Dischord" puts a strain on viewer involvement with the kind of bland, two-dimensional lead characters who are known to spill their guts out to dippy, all-seeing beachcombers while expressing the desire to be able to fly and dream again.
It's a shame they didn't have more interesting things to say and do, because cinematographer Ernst Kubitza managed to convincingly evoke that restless New England winter gloom despite the considerable time and budget constrictions, while John McCarthy's nicely subdued score compensates for some of the script's shriller passages.
DISCHORD
Artistic License Films
Ivy Media Group
Credits:
Director-screenwriter-producer-editor: Mark Wilkinson
Director of photography: Ernst Kubitza
Production designers: Natacha Alpert, Erica Switzer
Costume designers
Dane Peterson, Hana Rausalova, Maria Sparagna
Music: John McCarthy
Cast:
Jimmy: Thomas Jay Ryan
Gypsy: Annunziata Gianzero
Detective Dunbarton: Dick Bakalyan
Lucian: Andrew Borba
The Beachcomber: Rick Wessler
Billy Dunbarton: Michael DeLuise
Running time -- 102 minutes
No MPAA rating...
- 2/28/2003
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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