The Moveable Fest
The Moveable Fest
  • Interviews
    Interviews

    Jonas Carpignano on Heading Into Unknown Territory in “A Chiara”

    Kyle Gallner and Emily Skeggs on Serving Up Subversion in “Dinner in America”

    Bonni Jo Hart on Amping Up a Pioneering Band in “Fanny: The Right to Rock”

  • Reviews
    Reviews

    Cannes 2022 Review: The Terror of a Brutal Regime Hits Home in Manuela Martelli’s Engrossing “1976”

    Cannes 2022 Review: An Actor Gets a Part He’d Rather Not Play in the Curious Conspiracy Thriller “The Green Perfume”

    Cannes 2022 Review: Alexandru Belc’s “Metronom” Impressively Measures the Extent of a Heartbreak

  • The Mentaculist
    The Mentaculist
    Matt Damon in "Euro Trip"

    Matt Damon: A Career in Cameos

    Independence Day: My Street

    Five Movie Marketing Miscues That Blew Up in All the Wrong Ways

    Lucas Black and Nathalie Kelley in "Fast & Furious: Tokyo Drift"

    Justin Lin on “Tokyo Drift” and the Four Hours That Saved the
    “Fast & Furious” Franchise

  • Retrospective
    Retrospective

    Reclaiming Reality: Mario Van Peebles on Reimagining a City and an Industry in “New Jack City”

    Joachim Trier on “The Worst Person in the World” Epilogue, Freezing Oslo in Time and More with Paul Thomas Anderson

    A Resolution Comes True: The Making of “Get Crazy,” the Ultimate New Year’s Movie and Its Wild Restoration

  • Trending
    NowWeekMonth

    Cannes 2022 Review: The Terror of a Brutal Regime Hits Home in Manuela Martelli’s Engrossing “1976”

    Kyle Gallner and Emily Skeggs on Serving Up Subversion in “Dinner in America”

    Cannes 2022 Review: An Actor Gets a Part He’d Rather Not Play in the Curious Conspiracy Thriller “The Green Perfume”

    Cannes 2022 Review: “Les Pires” Reconsiders What An Exploitation Film Is

    Cannes 2022 Review: Alexandru Belc’s “Metronom” Impressively Measures the Extent of a Heartbreak

Latest
  • Latest
  • Oldest
  • Random
  • A to Z

Toronto Film Festival 2011

Toronto Film Festival 2011

TIFF ’12 Interview: Rowan Athale on the Hometown Charm of His Heist Thriller “Wasteland”

TIFF2012Header

RowanAthaleWasteland

If his first feature is an indicator that Rowan Athale was born into filmmaking, the fact that he went to the school where Ken Loach's breakthrough film "Kes" was shot bears it out. Now, Athale's time in the sticks of Great Britain has been put to great use in "Wasteland," a deviously devised heist thriller that may operate with the same smoke and mirrors as a glitzy caper as “Ocean's Eleven,” but takes on an entirely different tenor when set in a sleepy town where everybody knows everybody else.

It's a particularly close knit group of friends who decide to case a working men's club in the neighborhood, a quartet of childhood friends who will open up a coffee shop together should they successfully find their way into the club's safe and additionally extract a small amount of revenge for their mate Harvey (Luke Treadaway), who has been recently released from prison on a drug charge he was set up for by the club's owner. While the mechanics of the job are told in familiar, meticulous detail, what's unfamiliar about it is just how high the stakes are since for a group of small-town lads without much criminal inclination, a score isn't measured in monetary gains as much as in maturity and fostering a greater bond with each other. Shortly after the film's debut at this year's Toronto, Athale spoke about bringing real camaraderie to a caper film, shooting in his real hometown of Yorkshire and the filmmakers that got him interested in becoming a director. 

Read Story
Steve Oram and Alice Lowe in Ben Wheatley's film "Sightseers"
ReviewsToronto Film Festival 2011

TIFF ’12 Review: “Sightseers” Takes Ben Wheatley to New Heights

A mix of the dark comedy of his debut "Down Terrace" and the horror of his followup "Kill List," Ben Wheatley's third feature is small in conception, a big step forward for the filmmaker and just ridiculous in how sublime it is.
Read Story
Penn Badgley as Jeff Buckley in Dan Algrant's film "Greetings from Tim Buckley"
ReviewsToronto Film Festival 2011

TIFF ’12 Review: Dan Algrant’s “Greetings from Tim Buckley” Brings a Legend to Life

A surprisingly moving lead performance from Penn Badgley and low-key storytelling from director Dan Algrant make this snapshot from the tragically short lives of singer/songwriters Tim and Jeff Buckley a sound success.
Read Story
A scene from Patrice Leconte's "The Suicide Shop"
InterviewsToronto Film Festival 2011

TIFF ’12 Interview: Patrice Leconte on the Beautiful Afterlife of His Animated Musical “The Suicide Shop”

The filmmaker behind "Girl on the Bridge" and "Man on the Train" takes his talents to the animated realm with this mordantly amusing musical comedy about a cheerful boy born to a family of misnathropes.
Read Story
Michael Angarano and Juno Temple in Ramaa Mosley's "The Brass Teapot"
InterviewsToronto Film Festival 2011

TIFF ’12 Interview: Ramaa Mosley Spreads the Wealth with the Black Comedy “The Brass Teapot”

The first-time writer/director discusses her fantastical satire about a young, financially strapped married couple whose discovery of a magical kettle leads them to crippling each other to climb out of crippling debt.
Read Story
Ryan Gosling and Eva Mendes in Derek Cianfrance's "The Place Beyond the Pines"
InterviewsToronto Film Festival 2011

TIFF ’12 Interview: Derek Cianfrance on Exploring “The Place Beyond the Pines,” Comparisons to “Drive” and American Tribalism

The "Blue Valentine" writer/director talks about the influence of film school and fatherhood on his sprawling new drama.
Read Story
Rachel Korine, Selena Gomez, Ashley Benson, James Franco and Vanessa Hudgens in Harmony Korine's film "Spring Breakers"
ReviewsToronto Film Festival 2011

TIFF ’12 Review: Fun in the Sun Until it Burns in Harmony Korine’s “Spring Breakers”

Though it may be the point, the gluttony of a spring break gone wrong bleeds into the "Trash Humpers" depiction of it, proving sometimes there can be too much of a good thing.
Read Story
Joachim Roenning and Espen Sandberg's Thor Heyerdahl biopic "Kon-Tiki"
Toronto Film Festival 2011

TIFF ’12 Review: History Comes Alive in Roenning & Sandberg’s Seaworthy “Kon-Tiki”

The voyage of a spare raft made of balsa wood across the Pacific Ocean leads to a big adventure in this rollicking historical drama.
Read Story
Austin Film FestivalFestivalsReviewsToronto Film Festival 2011

Austin Film Fest ’11 Review: “Butter” Needs A Little More Churning

The second film from "She's Out of My League" director Jim Field Smith appeared to be more ambitious with a starry cast including Jennifer Garner and Olivia Wilde and a Black List script, but with heightened expectations, the butter carving comedy is only moderately amusing.
Read Story
Sharni Vinson in Adam Wingard's "You're Next"
Fantastic FestFestivalsReviewsToronto Film Festival 2011

Fantastic Fest ’11 Review: Why You’ll Hope “You’re Next” to See Adam Wingard’s Brilliant New Horror Flick

Picked up by Lionsgate and winner of multiple trophies at Fantastic Fest, "A Horrible Way to Die" director Adam Wingard's latest film about a home invasion gone horribly awry lives up to the hype and then some.
Read Story
Fantastic FestReviewsToronto Film Festival 2011

Review: A Whirlwind Michael Shannon Storms Through the Powerful “Take Shelter”

Featuring an extraordinary performance by Michael Shannon as a construction worker who sees the world falling apart around him, the sophomore film from "Shotgun Stories" writer/director Jeff Nichols is a natural wonder.
Read Story
FestivalsReviewsToronto Film Festival 2011

TIFF ’11 Review: The Flameout of Mary Harron’s “The Moth Diaries”

A crushing disappointment from the director of "American Psycho" may just be the best worst film to come down the pike in a long time.
Read Story
Load More
  • Contact Us
Copyright 2011 The Moveable Fest

Zeen Trending

Film NewsTo Live and Screen in L.A.

Joe Carnahan Talks About the Alternate Ending He Shot For “The Grey”

Mildred Loving, Peggy Loving and Richard Loving in "The Loving Story"
Interviews

Interview: Nancy Buirski and Peggy Loving on Finally Getting to Tell “The Loving Story”

The Mentaculist

Playing God: 13 Actors Who Dared To Be the Deity in Movies

Start typing to see results or hit ESC to close
The Moveable Fest documentaries interviews Kickstarter reviews
See all results