A Dozen Summers

A Dozen Summers

Theatrical Poster
Directed by Kenton Hall[1]
Produced by Alexzandra Jackson, Kenton Hall
Written by Kenton Hall [1]
Starring Scarlet Hall
Hero Hall
Colin Baker
Ewen MacIntosh
Sarah Warren
Kenton Hall
Music by Andrew Stamp (score), ist (songs)
Cinematography Geoffrey Gilson
Edited by Kenton Hall, Geoffrey Gilson
Production
company
Monkey Basket Films
Distributed by Ballpark Film Distributors
Release dates
  • August 21, 2015 (2015-08-21)
Running time
82 minutes[1]
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Budget £20,000 [2]

A Dozen Summers is a 2015 family comedy. It was written and directed by Kenton Hall and stars Scarlet Hall, Hero Hall, Colin Baker, Ewen MacIntosh, Sarah Warren and Kenton Hall. It received a limited UK cinema release on August 21, 2015.[3]

Plot

Maisie and Daisy McCormack are two, ordinary twelve-year-old girls trying to make their way through the minefield of life in the 21st century. Which, as far as their concerned, is largely a case of trying to work out why grown-ups behave so oddly on such a regular basis.

When they interrupt a children's adventure story in progress, by scaring off the Narrator, they hijack the film and proceed to tell the story of their own lives, through the lens of the movies they've seem.

Jacqueline, their mother is a struggling model with a idiosyncratic parenting method. Henry, their father, a writer who has sacrificed more than they realise to give them a stable home life.

Maisie and Daisy lead us through their day-to-day life -battling bullies Jennifer, Audrey and Beth and the pull of first love -Matty Archer, the school heartthrob for Maisie and, unbeknownst to Daisy, her best friend Samuel for her.

They take us through bad dates with Jacqueline, home-life with Henry, school life (with added were-wolves and vampires), before finally being forced to take the first tentative steps into adulthood when Jacqueline finally settles down and they decide to set their father up with their teacher, Miss Walters.

And they need to do it all before the story they interrupted re-asserts itself. It's a race against time -and Maisie and Daisy are learning it's not necessarily a race they can win.

And, in the end, that might not be such a bad thing after all.[4]

Cast

Release

"A Dozen Summers" premiered in the US on May 19, 2015 at Phoenix Comicon.[5][6] In the US, it was also an official selection of Mill Valley Film Festival as part of its Children's Film Fest and Mind the Gap strands.[7] In its native UK, it received a limited theatrical release in the UK from August 21, 2015 via Ballpark Film Distributors.[3]

Awards

"A Dozen Summers" was nominated for or won several awards during its festival run, including nominations for "Best Feature Film for Children" at Fan Chile [8] and Int. Children's TV Festival Dytiatko in the Ukraine,[9] and wins for Best Screenplay (Kenton Hall) and Best Actress (joint - Scarlet Hall and Hero Hall) at Festival de Cine Fantastico de Torremolinos in Spain.[10]

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, April 30, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.