

Wildflower
あらすじ
No synopsis available.
予告・トレイラー
作品考察・見どころ
AIが作品の魅力を深く読み解いています
原作・関連書籍
映画化された原作や関連書籍を読んで、映像との違いや独自の世界観を楽しみましょう。
スタッフ・制作会社
監督: Nicholas DiBella
脚本: Nicholas DiBella
制作: Marc Wax / Nicholas DiBella / Dale A. Brown
撮影監督: Matt Wise


No synopsis available.
AIが作品の魅力を深く読み解いています
映画化された原作や関連書籍を読んで、映像との違いや独自の世界観を楽しみましょう。
監督: Nicholas DiBella
脚本: Nicholas DiBella
制作: Marc Wax / Nicholas DiBella / Dale A. Brown
撮影監督: Matt Wise
_**She ran calling ‘Wildflower’**_ A 20 year-old (Nathalia Ramos) in a college town in northern New York has blackouts and premonitions, which pave the way for her to meet a troubled, but compassionate handyman (Cody Longo). They sort of team-up to investigate a missing girl case from a dozen years earlier. Kevin McCorkle plays the police chief and Alexa Rose Steele a young woman in the town. “Wildflower” (2014) is a crime drama/mystery with paranormal bits that only cost $650,000, but seems like more because it’s so well made (by writer/director Nicholas DiBella). This is not a thriller, as it has been wrongly designated in some places, although there are a couple brief thrills. It’s a low-key drama/mystery with slight faith-based aspects, mostly because the dude is fixing-up pews at a church facility and is dealing with disillusionment due to a tragedy. The pastor of the fellowship is actually a small role (Benjamin Ashbrook). So don’t watch this if you loathe the very concept of God or want a crime thriller with a dynamic scene every 10 minutes, like “Deadfall” (2012), which is a decent flick albeit contrived and unlikely. This one, by contrast, plays out like real life. For anyone who scoffs at the paranormal bits, these have to do with what the bible calls the ‘word of knowledge,’ the ability to know things about the past or immediate future which you wouldn’t otherwise know without this spiritual gift. Of course people with such gifts are understandably viewed by secularists as crazy and desperately needing the Psych Ward, which the movie touches on. To appreciate this picture you have to enjoy lifelike drama. It effectively shows how ordinary people and their stories are more interesting than the most overblown effects-laden extravaganzas (to me, at least). Both Nathalia Ramos and Cody Longo own their roles, especially Nathalia (particularly as the story proceeds). There’s an intangible honesty & reverence to the proceedings that appeals to me. Also, this is about way more than just solving a mystery, but the movie wisely takes the subtle approach, unlike “Deadfall” which smashes you over the head with its well-intentioned points. The film runs 1 hour, 32 minutes, and was shot in Brockport & Rochester, New York, about an hour’s drive east of Buffalo by Lake Ontario. GRADE: B