Home » Press and News » Currently Reading:

Film Threat Magazine gives Williamsburg 3.5 stars! “Memorable Achievement”

August 1, 2006 Press and News No Comments

WILLIAMSBURG

by Phil Hall
(2006-07-31)
2006, Un-rated, 99 minutes, Cadillac Films

Aspiring cinematographers would do well to seek out a small indie feature called “Williamsburg” to study and gain inspiration from what cinematographer Will Sargent and director Brad Saville achieved from behind the camera. Shot in black-and-white, “Williamsburg” has a striking visual style that is uncommon in today’s independent cinema – a series of bold, artistic compositions that uses monochromatic hues to create an extraordinary play of light and shadows. Too often, filmmakers just aim and shoot – in this case, the camerawork brilliantly mirrors the yin-and-yang of its complex characters.
“Williamsburg” takes place in the hipster Brooklyn neighborhood and its plotlines are populated by artists and artistic poseurs who try (with varying success) to be true to their own creative purposes even if it means destroying themselves. The film follows the story concept of the French classic “La Ronde,” with one character going about his or her life before interacting with another, at which point the film’s focus changes to the second character’s life…until a third character wanders in, and so forth.

While the film is brilliantly framed, the filmmakers too often keep their camera locked in single, extremely extended takes. This requires a great deal of the cast to keep the dialogue flowing longer than usual. Fortunately, the able cast brings their characters to life and provide a memorable tapestry of lives on the artistic fringes. Best here are Russ Russo as a chain-smoking painter selling his art on the sidewalk while he seems to cough and choke himself into a slow death, Penny Bittone as a would-be writer who insists would-be girlfriends read aloud from his writing before they make love, and Evertz I. Saenz-Perez as an unrepentant teenage thief who finds his inner-Cassavetes after acquiring a stolen video camera.

All told, “Williamsburg” is an impressive and memorable achievement.

CLICK TO READ THE ORIGINAL REVIEW

Comment on this Article:

Buy “Williamsburg” Special Edition DVD

Buy Brad Saville’s Novel “Grotesque”

"

"Williamsburg" Tweets

    News

    NY Press features “Williamsburg”

    December 9, 2009

    NY Press features “Williamsburg”

    Exerts: “No other recent Brooklyn product defines its people by the nature of their neighborhood more than Brad  Saville’s  Williamsburg. A riff on Richard Linklater’s Slacker, Williamsburg basically unfolds as a series of static shots following various despondent personalities, each of whom claims to be an artist but fails to produce any actual art.

    Saville, a playwright in [...]

    Splice Today’s film critic John Lingan: “Great cast and a Sympathetic Director”

    October 28, 2008

    Splice Today’s film critic John Lingan: “Great cast and a Sympathetic Director”

    Williamsburg is “a comedy dressed in Noir clothes…  A great cast and a sympathetic director.”
    -John Lingan, SpliceToday.com
    Share on Facebook

    Syracuse New Times review of Williamsburg: “Plenty of sharp dialogue to spare… Hilarious.”

    April 28, 2007

    Syracuse New Times review of Williamsburg: “Plenty of sharp dialogue to spare… Hilarious.”

    “The chronology hops all over the map in this Brooklyn-based indie comedy, which somehow links the travails of insufferable writer Truman (Penny Bittone) with a chain-smoking sidewalk painter named Brother James (Russ Russo), music-video director Will (David Marcus), budding filmmaker and part-time mugger Miguel (Evertz I. Saenz-Perez), his sister Anna (Anna Lamadrid) and sultry Slovakian [...]

    Film Threat Magazine gives Williamsburg 3.5 stars! “Memorable Achievement”

    August 1, 2006

    Film Threat Magazine gives Williamsburg 3.5 stars! “Memorable Achievement”

    WILLIAMSBURG
    by Phil Hall
    (2006-07-31)
    2006, Un-rated, 99 minutes, Cadillac Films

    Aspiring cinematographers would do well to seek out a small indie feature called “Williamsburg” to study and gain inspiration from what cinematographer Will Sargent and director Brad Saville achieved from behind the camera. Shot in black-and-white, “Williamsburg” has a striking visual style that is uncommon in today’s independent [...]