Bear (2011 film)

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Bear
Directed by Nash Edgerton
Produced by Lauren Edwards
John Polson
Written by David Michod
Nash Edgerton
Starring Nash Edgerton
Teresa Palmer
Warwick Thornton
Music by Ben Lee
Ione Skye
Jack Graddis
Cinematography Adam Arkapaw
Editing by Nash Edgerton
Studio Blue-Tongue Films
Peachy Pictures
Fxphd
Release dates
  • 21 May 2011 (2011-05-21) (Cannes)
Running time 11 minutes
Country Australia
Language English

Bear is a 2011 Australian short black comedy drama film directed by Nash Edgerton and written by David Michod and Nash Edgerton.[1][2][3][4] The film had its world premiere in competition at the Cannes Film Festival on 21 May 2011.[5][6][7]

Plot

Jack has the perfect birthday surprise planned for Emelie. Sometimes, though, plans go horrifically wrong.

Cast

Reception

Critical response

The film earned mainly positive reviews from critics. Ivan Kander of short of the week gave film the positive review said "Edgerton isn’t trying to surprise you—he already pulled off that magic trick once with Spider. Instead, he’s reveling a bit in a sort of misanthropic playground. Our protagonist is a cartoon character of sorts—the Wile E. Coyote of cinematic schadenfreude. He’s always getting himself, and his loved ones, into the darndest, deadliest situations. And, all the while, we can’t help but laugh at his misfortune."[8] David Brook of blue print review gave the film three and a half out of five stars and said "A sequel to Spider, Bear basically replays the gag in a new setting. Predictable of course for this reason, but still funny and well produced."[9] Another critic in his review said that "Reviewing a film this short is going to be fairly similar to reviewing an advert, because and with so little time to build character or a world, it essentially comes down to did you did or did you didn’t like the punch. In this case, I did, it gave me a legitimate ‘ I didn’t see that coming’ moment, upon the fact that it was coolly put together and even pulls of a very impressive stunt. Not one I’ll remember for the rest of my days for sure, but an amusing distraction, which is exactly what I think it was designed to be."[10]

Awards

Year Award Category Recipient Result
2011 Cannes Film Festival Palme d'Or - Best Short Film Nash Edgerton Nominated[5]
Leeds International Film Festival Louis le Prince International Short Film Nash Edgerton Won[11]
Strasbourg International Film Festival Golden Octopus for the best international short fantastic film Nash Edgerton Won[12]
2012 Flickerfest International Short Film Festival Best Direction in an Australian Short Film Nash Edgerton Won[13][14]

Notes

Bear is a follow up of Edgerton's 2007 short film Spider.[15]

See also

References

External links

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