A young woman speaks truth out of her heart to a young man as they sit in a sun-dappled forest. That's it; no yelling, no bombs exploding, no aliens on the scene. Our exclusive clip from Indigo Children feels very honest and appears to be quite representative of the movie as a whole. According to the official synopsis: "A mysterious girl pursues a young man in her new small town home. Coinciding deaths and a disappearance create a common thread between them as they struggle with young love and loss over the course of one summer." Isabelle McNally and Robert Olsen star. Eric Chaney wrote and directed, making his feature debut. The film will be digitally released on Tuesday, August 23, exclusively on iTunes and...
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- 8/17/2016
- Screen Anarchy
A mysterious girl pursues a young man in her new small town home. Coinciding deaths and a disappearance create a common thread between them as they struggle with young love and loss over the course of one summer. Written and directed by Eric Chaney. The movie stars Isabelle McNally and Robert Olsen. “Indigo Children” will be digitally released on August 23 and will be available on iTunes.
The post Exclusive: Indigo Children Gets A New Movie Poster appeared first on Shockya.com.
The post Exclusive: Indigo Children Gets A New Movie Poster appeared first on Shockya.com.
- 8/11/2016
- by Rudie Obias
- ShockYa
The term "New Age-y" doesn't have the best connotations, so director Eric Chaney was at a disadvantage with Indigo Children, a film about an adolescent romance based on the pseudoscientific concept that some children possess special or supernatural powers.
In the lazy days of a pastoral summer, Mark (Robert Olsen) notices that Christina (Isabelle McNally) has been unabashedly leering at him through the trees. The teenagers meet and begin a breezy romance predicated upon, at least to her, the fact that they are both indigos.
There's nothing noticeably special about them, unless you count their whiny, listless personalities — can you be so stubbornly ordinary that you become something more?
Chaney attempts a dreamlike quality by alternating between ...
In the lazy days of a pastoral summer, Mark (Robert Olsen) notices that Christina (Isabelle McNally) has been unabashedly leering at him through the trees. The teenagers meet and begin a breezy romance predicated upon, at least to her, the fact that they are both indigos.
There's nothing noticeably special about them, unless you count their whiny, listless personalities — can you be so stubbornly ordinary that you become something more?
Chaney attempts a dreamlike quality by alternating between ...
- 1/15/2014
- Village Voice
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