Wilderness Survival for Girls | |
---|---|
Directed by | Eli B. Despres Kim Roberts |
Written by | Eli B. Despres Kim Roberts |
Starring |
Jeanette Brox Ali Humison Megan Henning James Morrison |
Cinematography | Robin Melhuish |
Edited by | Eli B. Despres Kim Roberts |
Music by | B. Quincy Griffin Hector H. Perez |
Release date |
|
Running time | 78 min. |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Wilderness Survival for Girls is a 2004 independent thriller film directed by Eli B. Despres and Kim Roberts and starring Jeanette Brox, Ali Humison, Megan Henning, and James Morrison. It was shot in 18 days. [1]
Three soon-to-graduate high school girls stay at a mountain cabin. A stranger named Ed comes to their cabin. They manage to overpower him and tie him to a chair. The film shows the girls' responses to their captive stranger.
Scott Weinberg of DVD Talk said that although the film is not entirely successful, credit is due the writers/ directors for their original script. [2] Sid Smith of the Chicago Tribune ended his review by saying that viewers are likely to leave with something to think about. [1] Robert Koehler of Variety commented on James Morrison, "a superb, nuanced and inexplicably underused actor on the big screen, is able to shift between vulnerability and being a real threat in the physically contained yet wide-ranging role." [3]
Wilderness Survival for Girls | |
---|---|
Directed by | Eli B. Despres Kim Roberts |
Written by | Eli B. Despres Kim Roberts |
Starring |
Jeanette Brox Ali Humison Megan Henning James Morrison |
Cinematography | Robin Melhuish |
Edited by | Eli B. Despres Kim Roberts |
Music by | B. Quincy Griffin Hector H. Perez |
Release date |
|
Running time | 78 min. |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Wilderness Survival for Girls is a 2004 independent thriller film directed by Eli B. Despres and Kim Roberts and starring Jeanette Brox, Ali Humison, Megan Henning, and James Morrison. It was shot in 18 days. [1]
Three soon-to-graduate high school girls stay at a mountain cabin. A stranger named Ed comes to their cabin. They manage to overpower him and tie him to a chair. The film shows the girls' responses to their captive stranger.
Scott Weinberg of DVD Talk said that although the film is not entirely successful, credit is due the writers/ directors for their original script. [2] Sid Smith of the Chicago Tribune ended his review by saying that viewers are likely to leave with something to think about. [1] Robert Koehler of Variety commented on James Morrison, "a superb, nuanced and inexplicably underused actor on the big screen, is able to shift between vulnerability and being a real threat in the physically contained yet wide-ranging role." [3]