REVIEW:  Natural and supernatural lessons in Company One’s ‘Haunted’

What more could be haunting this haunted house?

Spiritually stuck in the Y2K era and in an often vacant house for the past 20 years, two indigenous brother ghosts long to rise to the great beyond and reunite with Creator and their ancestors.  However, something more is haunting this house beyond the antics they use to chase prospective home buyers away.   Using dance as escapism and as a way to cope, Bradley Lewis depicts an over the top Ash who never had the chance to grow up while older brother Aaron, portrayed with reticence by Chingwe Padraig Sullivan, carries a lot that he cannot move beyond as well.

Bradley Lewis, Katherine Callaway, Evan Turissini, Tanya Avendaño Stockler (Photo by Ken Yotsukura Photography)

Written, directed and choreographed by Tara Moses, Company One presents thought provoking horror comedy Haunted continuing live and in person in Rabb Hall at the Boston Public Library through Saturday, February 15.  The show runs approximately two hours with one 15 minute intermission and tickets are available at a pay what you can basis.  Click here for more information and for tickets.

Chingwe Padraig Sullivan, Katherine Callaway, Bradley Lewis (Photo by Ken Yotsukura Photography)

Y2K reigns supreme as two brothers are culturally frozen in time having never moved beyond Ash’s adoration of Britney Spears or Aaron rocking out to Creed since their deaths in 2003.  However, Danielle Delafuente’s scenic design reflects how frequently time marches on as books, furniture and portraits change as the brothers imagine and fret over an all too predictable future.   A nice touch is the ice film on the windows to indicate paranormal activity.  However, the brothers often play music and can make the living see things, yet it is a wonder why the living do not acknowledge when Ash plays one song after another.  Is the living so steeped in their world that they cannot hear or see what is playing on a boom box?

Elmer Martinez’s symbolic lighting and Aubrey Dube’s foreboding sound design builds intensity and keeps the lines of communication going embodying this unknown entity through flashing pink and purple lights, ominous chimes and illuminated images on the walls.

Evan Turissini (Photo by Ken Yotsukura Photography)

With the exception of the two brothers and JāQuan Malik Jones as Vincent, the remaining cast members portray a number of unlikable stereotypes.  From a righteous Quaker to a scholarly intellectual historian, Evan Turissini often portrays these shallow characters with a mix of dark humor and audacity while Katherine Callaway and Tanya Avendaño Stockler become increasingly more manipulative with each newcomer.  The ghosts often make assumptions everyone acts a certain way perhaps in fear of being disappointed.  It might have been more intriguing if Vincent and the brothers saw more than one side of these characters. 

Chingwe Padraig Sullivan, Katherine Callaway, Evan Turissini, Tanya Avendaño Stockler, Bradley Lewis (Photo by Ken Yotsukura Photography)

On the flip side, JāQuan Malik Jones delivers an impressive performance as level headed Vincent whose actions are anything but predictable.  Lewis as Ash and Sullivan as Aaron  share a likable rapport as paranormal brothers whose bickering and conflicts often stem from too much time together, but they also share a mutual respect partly due to this supernatural bonding time.

Chingwe Padraig Sullivan, JāQuan Malik Jones, Bradley Lewis (Photo by Ken Yotsukura Photography)

Haunted has some inconsistencies and may have benefited by a shorter run time, but offers a lot of educational insights into man’s connection to the land, indigenous culture, the Land Back movement, and how one can learn more and contribute to change.

Company One presents thought provoking horror comedy Haunted continuing live and in person in Rabb Hall at the Boston Public Library through Saturday, February 15.  The show runs approximately two hours with one 15 minute intermission and all tickets are available at a pay what you can basis.  Click here for more information and for tickets.

REVIEW: ‘Chabe,’ ‘Conversations with Female Clowns,’ ‘Dictionary’ and ‘Por Mi Hija’ explore various aspects of love and connection at The New York City Indie Film Festival

The New York City Indie Film Festival concluded on June 19 after approximately a week of screenings at the Producers Club in New York City.  It featured a variety of films from shorts to narratives to documentaries curated with common themes.  At this festival, Sleepless Critic had the opportunity to see screenings on music, small businesses, love and connection, and much more which will be explored in future articles.  Co-founded by Executive Director Dennis Cieri and Director Bonnie Rush, this renowned festival has screened thousands of films since it first launched in 2010.  Click here for more information.

Photo credit to Jeanne Denizard

Curated by Lucie Guillemot, this narrative film collection explored different aspects of love and connection.  Directed by John Tsiavis, Chabe is a vivid short film about Isabel Gomez, a woman who assists in a cataracts surgery project for a Mexican indigenous tribe.  Rich in unique color and told through Isabel’s eyes, the film evokes Isabel’s sheer joy in helping others and the complex process of this tribe’s journey from dark to light.  Chabe made me long to see more on it all.

Isabel Gomez in ‘Chabe’ Photo credit to NYC Indie Film Festival

Directed insightfully by Clare Redden and Joseph Pulitzer, Conversations with Female Clowns is a surprising look at connection through laughter from a unique perspective.  Reflected through a group of female clowns, it explores not only the incentive for a woman to become a clown, but the societal and personal norms as a female that seem to relate all too well to this profession.  It sheds light on the idea of clowning from a new angle with an opportunity to see these female clowns in action.  From a hospital clown to a member of the Big Apple Circus, Conversations with Female Clowns is an eye opening and humbling experience about what it truly means to be funny.

Director and writer Clare Redden of ‘Conversations with Female Clowns’ Photo credit to NYC Indie Film Festival

Dictionary explores the ODU concept of the seven stages of love in vignettes.  A tribute to the Indian culture, Aishwarya Sonar has a great deal to convey in the screening’s brief time frame and writer, director, and producer Elena Viklova aptly evokes the fleeting and sacred power of love in each frame.  From the warm bloom of attraction to the stillness of grief, Sonar elevates each stage in dynamic subtleties.

‘Dictionary’ by Elena Viklova Photo credit to NYC Indie Film Festival

Por Mi Hija (For My Daughter) is an immersive Spanish language film that addresses familial love and the dream of what is thought to be a better life.  Written, directed, and produced by Fernando Rodriguez who dedicated this film to his wife and kids and based on two true stories, Por Mi Hija is a stirring account that examines what creates a fulfilling life in an unconventional way. 

Christopher Bustos as Leo and Daniela Vidaurre as Emma are young newlyweds living a happy life surrounded by family in Mexico when they receive life changing news that prompts Leo to seek success in California.  Bustos and Vidaurre depict a strong and relatable couple with endearing chemistry as they face moving and realistic trials and tribulations while Luciana Elisa Quiñonez shines as imaginative and sweet Luciana. 

Christopher Bustos, Daniela Viduarre, and Luciana Elisa Quinonez in ‘Por Mi Hija’ Photo credit to NYC Indie Film Festival

The real strength in this film lies in its unconventional timeline and how it manages expectations and reality.  The various parallel scenes between Leo and Emma including having a meal or riding in a car are gripping as it is weaved into the film’s progression and there is a dreamlike quality looking into the past as well as a hazy, ethereal ambiance of the future. This particular style enhances the film’s poignant message while achieving a balance between the lighthearted and tense moments.  It also embodies what the characters cannot quite see at the time until the film’s stunning revelation.

Chabe, Conversations with Female Clowns, Dictionary and Por Mi Hija were all part of Narrative 14 at the New York City Indie Film Festival which continued through June 19.  Click here for more information on this annual festival and its winners.