Lions' Den (2007) Poster

(2007)

User Reviews

Review this title
2 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
8/10
Haphazard Photography; Unscripted Dialogue; Improvised Performance... Yet Razor-Sharp in Viewability
adamdonaghey29 November 2007
Anytime I feel awkward during a screening due to its content usually means I'm engaged in a film worth viewing. Lions' Den is one of those films. Frank Mosley has created an intense fifteen minutes of film that shames and embarrasses the audience. These emotions compel the viewer to continue watching... Just as long as no one else is looking.

The haphazard photography intensifies the situation with its blurring images and gritty movement. What's really amazing about the short however, is that it was completely improvised--a method of film making that's becoming more and more popular these days. But while many films lack substance due to their unscripted dialogue, Mosley's seems to be more refined, due to its extreme realism. Mosley's ability to create such a stressful tone with his film is truly right on. Check out Lions' Den, if you have the stomach for it.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Ind. DIY film-making & conversations about bodily fluids mark this artistic short! Wonderful
MJStylo24 November 2007
Frank Mosley's LIONS' DEN is a brave narrative short. Mosley bypasses the big plot heavy events that drive most commercial fare, takes commendable risks and chooses to highlight how the nuances of simple conversation - the wavering of emotion, and the tone of the room can communicate a great deal about people. The strength of this piece lies in the acting and the sound design. The shaky medium-grade videoography is instantly forgiven, or even embraced as an aesthetic tool while the dialogue and delivery consume the viewer with genuine interest. A particular standout is the performance of Matthew Buck, the actor who plays Matthew the center of the night's attention. His shy "include-me" posturing is shot and played to a heartbreaking tee. Another standout performance is contributed by the groups' alpha dog funny man/storyteller played by the sublimely talented young actor Gideon Seaman, whose skill at natural improvisation seems inborn.

I would without hesitation locate this film within the emerging American Independent Film movement often termed Mumble core or Mumble Corps. or Slack-a-vettes. The seminal films of this movement are often cited as Funny Ha Ha and Mutual Appreciation by Andrew Bujalski, The Puffy Chair by the Duplass Bros., Kissing on the Mouth, LOL, and Hannah Takes the Stairs by Joe Swanberg and Quiet City by Aaron Katz. These feature films are often accompanied by shorts or web serials, of which I would include LIONS' DEN. The ingredients involve a DIY mode of production, naturalistic acting style, improvised or not, largely plot less wandering narratives, twenty-something guys looking for meaning or self-definition, and an interest in the art of conversation. These are vague wandering criteria certainly, but it has revived an interest in the connoisseurship of good homegrown American Independent film that genuinely aspires to be art rather than commodity - and who can argue that is a bad thing?

Apart from induction into any official schema or genre, Moseley's' LIONS' DEN is an outright achievement in old-fashion film-making. The scenario at the heart of LIONS' DEN is inherently funny when taken out of context; it could have easily delved off into bouts of self-conscious over-the-topness. Moseley stays with the natural discomfort and the momentum of tension that mounts throughout the scene, without indulging in melodrama.

He is a promising filmmaker and I look forward to seeing what he will do in the future.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed