3 reviews
Great short into the thoughts of a mentor
Ever wonder what someone else was thinking? How about one of your teachers from High School? Ever wonder what was going through their heads as they tried to bestow wisdom and teachings to a class of hormone raging smartasses that would rather be Xbox-ing? Worm, a new Canadian short (20 minutes) takes us into the mind of Geoffrey Dodd (Robert Nolan), an average looking High School teacher that looks like every other boring High School teacher you may have had during your teens.
As the camera follows Geoffrey through the course of his day, a running narrative gives us a glimpse into the mind and the dark corners of Geoffrey's thoughts. We are brought into a world where the outer exterior does not match the raging intolerance of his contemplations.
Geoffrey speaks eloquently and authoritatively to his students and peers, but his thoughts are schizophrenic in delivery. With a nod and smile, Geoffrey narrates notions such as "I bet if we parted that greasy mop of yours we would find a whole bunch of scares left by your mom's coat hanger. Too bad she didn't finish the job." Ouch! And his distaste for all those around him doesn't stop there. In a common, typical day as constructed by the premise, Geoffrey thinks of another student as a "Cocky little rodent" and with another, thoughts of, "I hope your mother and father rot from cancer!" spew in his reflections.
Geoffrey's thoughts only intensify throughout the duration of the school day. He has lustful thoughts of another student and even imagines using a gun on himself and others as a way of expressing his revulsion of the people and places that surround his daily life.
Written and directed by Richard Powell, Worm is a fascinating and ultimately terrifying look into the thoughts of an unstable mentor. Powell couldn't have picked better casting in the role of Geoffrey as Robert Nolan is able to relay in actions and thoughts a believable structure of a tormented soul. He's the introvert equivalent to Falling Down's, William 'D-Fens' Foster – ready to explode and only subdued by the sound of the bell.
Worm effectively uses its 1200 minutes to get its audience involved with the character and interested in notions. 30 minutes might have been too long and 15 minutes too short. Powell has found his baby bear bed in a tight 20 minutes of film.
Worm might be hard to find in a world saturated with blockbuster sequel rentals, but if you get the chance, give Worm a shot. It's style and pace shows what a talented filmmaker can produce with only a few minutes of celluloid.
As the camera follows Geoffrey through the course of his day, a running narrative gives us a glimpse into the mind and the dark corners of Geoffrey's thoughts. We are brought into a world where the outer exterior does not match the raging intolerance of his contemplations.
Geoffrey speaks eloquently and authoritatively to his students and peers, but his thoughts are schizophrenic in delivery. With a nod and smile, Geoffrey narrates notions such as "I bet if we parted that greasy mop of yours we would find a whole bunch of scares left by your mom's coat hanger. Too bad she didn't finish the job." Ouch! And his distaste for all those around him doesn't stop there. In a common, typical day as constructed by the premise, Geoffrey thinks of another student as a "Cocky little rodent" and with another, thoughts of, "I hope your mother and father rot from cancer!" spew in his reflections.
Geoffrey's thoughts only intensify throughout the duration of the school day. He has lustful thoughts of another student and even imagines using a gun on himself and others as a way of expressing his revulsion of the people and places that surround his daily life.
Written and directed by Richard Powell, Worm is a fascinating and ultimately terrifying look into the thoughts of an unstable mentor. Powell couldn't have picked better casting in the role of Geoffrey as Robert Nolan is able to relay in actions and thoughts a believable structure of a tormented soul. He's the introvert equivalent to Falling Down's, William 'D-Fens' Foster – ready to explode and only subdued by the sound of the bell.
Worm effectively uses its 1200 minutes to get its audience involved with the character and interested in notions. 30 minutes might have been too long and 15 minutes too short. Powell has found his baby bear bed in a tight 20 minutes of film.
Worm might be hard to find in a world saturated with blockbuster sequel rentals, but if you get the chance, give Worm a shot. It's style and pace shows what a talented filmmaker can produce with only a few minutes of celluloid.
- gregsrants
- Mar 31, 2010
- Permalink
a restless, sordid and ferocious short that will make you feel uneasy for its entire running time
- randimhero-1
- Apr 12, 2010
- Permalink
Richard Powell , Brampton, Ont., Canadian Boy Makes good!
Something super-toxic must be pulsating in Brampton , Ont. Canada'a water these days (could be the cosmic energy of it's popular, award winning & beloved, arts/hockey-supporting mayor: Susan Fennell)...it seems that just like the convergence of star power that in the late '80s and '90s centred on Scarborough which produced such diverse bright lights as Mike Myers, Jim Carrey, The Barenaked Ladies and Paul Tracy, just to mention a few Brampton (aka Bramladesh, B-town, and Brownton ) is the hometown or hot-bed residence of a new wave of celebrities such as ; (Metal Queen:) Lee Aaron, Russell Peters, Tyler Labine, Michael Cera, Paulo Costanza , Shawn and Aaron Ashmore, Keshia Chanté, (comedian) Scott Thompson, Richard Marsella ,(Broken Social Scene member) Jason Collett, Vivita, Lewis Mercer, Mike Burry, Dave Lei, Brandon & Brittany (or is that Britney) Watt...and 'er, Myself. Well 'Worm' film-maker: Richard Powell might as well join this talented lot (Hell, me too!). My date at a preview screening (Vivita, actually ) was very surprised to learn that it was a Canadian, short & not a feature from a major studio. Powell is on the right track by hiring pros and spending a crap-load of money on this short. If I were a hep, influential producer ( which I ain't; either her or influential), I'd take this to a Major Producer (to get to someone like Jack Nicholson; say) to be made as a Major Studio feature (like the filmmakers of 'Sky Captain' did). Powell's (and Zach Green's) insight into psychological horror film-making is commendable. If this trend & growth of home-grown talent keeps up; B-town should be a viable contender for being the 'premier' film-making capital of Canada!..Let's hope all of the above mention talent could stay in Canada, join up into a super-cinematic think-tank & create some amazing feature films that''s blow the world away...as for Richard Powell & his associate: Zach Green..Keep your eyes on these two filmmakers, genre-lovers ...they are a-movin' on up!
- TONYWATT3000
- Jun 15, 2010
- Permalink