The Midnight Swim

The Midnight Swim
Directed by Sarah Adina Smith
Written by Sarah Adina Smith
Starring Lindsay Burdge
Jennifer Lafleur
Aleksa Palladino
Cinematography Shaheen Seth
Edited by Sarah Adina Smith
Release dates
  • July 27, 2014 (Fantasia Film Festival)
Running time
84 minutes
Language English

The Midnight Swim is a 2014 a POV drama-mystery and the feature film directorial debut of Sarah Adina Smith.[1] The film had its world premiere on July 27, 2014 at the Fantasia Film Festival and stars Lindsay Burdge, Jennifer Lafleur, and Aleksa Palladino as three half-sisters trying to put their missing mother's affairs in order.

Synopsis

When June's (Lindsay Burdge) mother goes mysteriously missing after diving in Spirit Lake, she and her sisters are travel home to put her affairs in order. June, a mentally unstable documentary filmmaker, records the experience with her two half-sisters Annie (Jennifer Lafleur) and Isa (Aleksa Palladino). Their mother, an ecologist who was campaigning to preserve Spirit Lake, is gone but always present. As they settle back into her house, Isa takes up with June's ex-crush Josh (Ross Partridge) while several strange occurrences happen after they jokingly summon the ghost of a local legend. As the questions mount, the family begins to unravel and June finds herself drawn deeper into the true mystery of the lake.

Cast

Reception

Critical reception for The Midnight Swim has been positive,[2] with much of the film's praise centering around the performances and the "acutely unsettling" tone of the film.[3] IndieWire praised these elements, calling the film "enigmatic and fathomless," and stating that the film "is, among other things, a movie about sisters, who actually seem like sisters. They look alike, they sound alike, they move alike enough to seem like sibs. One is a believer, one is a cynic; one is, at least on the surface, slightly unstable. They may be variations on a single genetic theme, but even their differences speak to kinship."[4] Twitch Film and Film School Rejects also wrote positive reviews,[5] with Film School Rejects commenting that although they saw the found footage format as a "constant distraction" the film was overall well acted and praised the film's imagery.[6] Whereas Fangoria commented that the found footage format was integral to the story and something more akin to an emotional POV, stating that "the camera uniquely acts as an almost-transparent bridge between you and a character’s psyche." [7] Moveable Fest says the movie "terrifies existentially." [8] Ion Cinema states that "The unnerving quality of Sarah Adina Smith’s directorial debut, The Midnight Swim, occurs mostly in its aftereffects, leaving us with the profound, less earthbound implications in its final few moments." [9]

References

  1. Halfyard, Kurt. "Fantasia 2014 Interview: Talking THE MIDNIGHT SWIM And Emotional POV With Sarah Adina Smith". Twitch Film. Retrieved 10 August 2014.
  2. Zimmerman, Samuel. ""THE MIDNIGHT SWIM" (Fantasia Movie Review)". Fangoria. Retrieved 10 August 2014.
  3. Halfyard, Kurt. "Fantasia 2014 Review: THE MIDNIGHT SWIM, Where Still Waters Run Deep". Twitch Film. Retrieved 10 August 2014.
  4. Anderson, John. "Fantasia Review: 'The Midnight Swim' Will Stun Your Senses". IndieWire. Retrieved 10 August 2014.
  5. Halfyard, Kurt. "Fantasia 2014 Review: THE MIDNIGHT SWIM, Where Still Waters Run Deep". Twitch Film. Retrieved 10 August 2014.
  6. Hunter, Rob. "‘The Midnight Swim’ Review Fantasia 2014: An Ethereal Unease Lessened By Distraction". Film School Rejects. Retrieved 10 August 2014.
  7. Zimmerman, Samuel. ""THE MIDNIGHT SWIM" (Fantasia Movie Review)". Fangoria. Retrieved 10 August 2014.
  8. Saito, Stephen. "FANTASIA FEST ’14 REVIEW: "MIDNIGHT SWIM" OFFERS CHILLS AND THRILLS". Moveable Fest. Retrieved 10 August 2014.
  9. Bell, Nicholas. "The Midnight Swim | 2014 Fantasia Film Festival Review". Ion Cinema. Retrieved 10 August 2014.

External links