Strawberry Mansion
- 2021
- 1 h 31 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,5/10
2,9 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaIn a future where the government records dreams and taxes them, a dream auditor gets caught up in the dreams of an aging eccentric.In a future where the government records dreams and taxes them, a dream auditor gets caught up in the dreams of an aging eccentric.In a future where the government records dreams and taxes them, a dream auditor gets caught up in the dreams of an aging eccentric.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Prêmios
- 2 vitórias e 9 indicações no total
Kenneth Brossoie
- Paramedic
- (as Kenny Brossole)
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
How do you resist when even your dreams are taxed and mercilessly injected with ads? This low-budget oddity, part Lewis Carroll part Terry Gilliam, follows a 'dream auditor' down the rabbit hole to find a new dream life and a way to stop the invasion of our minds in the 'Strawberry Mansion'. While the production is sometimes rough around the edges, the concept is intriguing, and the casting and creature designs are quite good. Kentucker Audley anchors this as the slightly bewildered auditor Preble, and actors Penny Fuller and Grace Glowicki feature as the artist Arabella, aged in reality and youthful in dreams respectively. How they managed to craft this lightly engaging gem on such a tiny budget is a question for the big studios to ponder.
A film about taxes and dreams, and then a love that seems to transcend the latter (or take place within the latter), Strawberry Mansion is also about taxing dreams, and some potential conspiracy about advertising in dreams. There are lots of dreams. It is unsurprisingly dreamlike and there's something undeniably impactful about it, but I feel like I got lost in both good ways and bad.
Still, more good than bad. I mostly liked this a lot. It's creatively fantastical for something that doesn't look big budget, and I like how so much stuff that sounds goofy on paper was presented with sincerity. It commits to a deeply strange logic and always feels consistent to itself, though I wished I was able to keep up entirely. Some parts are quite moving in ways that are hard to describe.
The experience it provides makes it more than worth digging out. I also thought the music was incredible, and it was cool to learn Dan Deacon was behind it (have heard at least one of his albums before).
At the end of the day, I feel like there's a lot that could be said about Strawberry Mansion; maybe even too much. But I can't say much at the moment. Whether seeing it again or reading up on it will unlock more of its secrets remains to be seen. For all I know, maybe everyone else is similarly lost (again, this is mostly a good thing; feels generally intentional, if just the tiniest bit frustrating).
Oh, it was also funny how much one of the supporting actors in this looked like Nick Offerman.
Still, more good than bad. I mostly liked this a lot. It's creatively fantastical for something that doesn't look big budget, and I like how so much stuff that sounds goofy on paper was presented with sincerity. It commits to a deeply strange logic and always feels consistent to itself, though I wished I was able to keep up entirely. Some parts are quite moving in ways that are hard to describe.
The experience it provides makes it more than worth digging out. I also thought the music was incredible, and it was cool to learn Dan Deacon was behind it (have heard at least one of his albums before).
At the end of the day, I feel like there's a lot that could be said about Strawberry Mansion; maybe even too much. But I can't say much at the moment. Whether seeing it again or reading up on it will unlock more of its secrets remains to be seen. For all I know, maybe everyone else is similarly lost (again, this is mostly a good thing; feels generally intentional, if just the tiniest bit frustrating).
Oh, it was also funny how much one of the supporting actors in this looked like Nick Offerman.
Strawberry Mansion is a film you don't see as much of.
In the vein of Gondry's films like Science of Sleep or Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind - Strawberry Mansion is utterly charming, using everything from a dreamy score, stop motion and great prop and set design to tell a heartwarming tale of love and dreams.
In the vein of Gondry's films like Science of Sleep or Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind - Strawberry Mansion is utterly charming, using everything from a dreamy score, stop motion and great prop and set design to tell a heartwarming tale of love and dreams.
Strawberry Mansion isn't perfect, but I have a distinct sense if people understood what it took to deliver the mind-warping visuals delivered thorughout, people would have a lot more respect for it.
This movie appears to be shot in 16mm. In reality, it's a digital film, incorporating stop motion animation, CGI, live action and animation as part of a coherent whole, which was then 'filmed out'' to 16mm. There are only three film labs in the U. S. that can process 16mm film-outs. In the case of Strawberry Mansion, the aspect ratios don't match up, and so the film's original widescreen 16:9 aspect ratio had to be squeezed into the 4:3 aspect ratio of 16mm.
This warps the image but offers the desired grain that Birney and Audley were after. Then the film was printed onto 400-foot reels of roughly 10 minutes and 40 seconds each. The film reels are scanned digitally, and then, reversing the squeezing formula, the image is stretched back out to 16:9, eliminating the warped look, but including all that desired film grain. Strawberry Mansion used 7203 Kodak 50D film stock for its film-out.
Why does it matter you ask? Because the script that accompanies it is the stuff of dreams, and if a Gaspar Noe or a Lynch had delivered this, it would be deemed a box office success (sadly, Strawberry Mansion didn't do so well).
The acting is on point, and while it's true that at time you can 'see through' some of the magic which kills the initial immersion, it's still a marvel of dedicated filmmaking with a very strong main arc, an insightful foray into a future dystopia and a bloody good representation of the human psyche viewed through a dream.
Yes, it's a hard sell, but I admire the Directors for bringing this to life, as it's easily a 20m $ concept shot on a shoestring budget with amazing results. It may not cut as deep as some indy marvels out there, but as a friend recommended me the other day, why constantly give movies on imdb 1 or 10s? Strawberry Mansion confortably sits at a 7, and with a little bit more cash, could have easily pulled an 8.5.
A must watch for any movie lover, or anyone who still have that child-like appreciation for magic, but don't want to be spoon fed a Disney (tm) milquetoast production.
This movie appears to be shot in 16mm. In reality, it's a digital film, incorporating stop motion animation, CGI, live action and animation as part of a coherent whole, which was then 'filmed out'' to 16mm. There are only three film labs in the U. S. that can process 16mm film-outs. In the case of Strawberry Mansion, the aspect ratios don't match up, and so the film's original widescreen 16:9 aspect ratio had to be squeezed into the 4:3 aspect ratio of 16mm.
This warps the image but offers the desired grain that Birney and Audley were after. Then the film was printed onto 400-foot reels of roughly 10 minutes and 40 seconds each. The film reels are scanned digitally, and then, reversing the squeezing formula, the image is stretched back out to 16:9, eliminating the warped look, but including all that desired film grain. Strawberry Mansion used 7203 Kodak 50D film stock for its film-out.
Why does it matter you ask? Because the script that accompanies it is the stuff of dreams, and if a Gaspar Noe or a Lynch had delivered this, it would be deemed a box office success (sadly, Strawberry Mansion didn't do so well).
The acting is on point, and while it's true that at time you can 'see through' some of the magic which kills the initial immersion, it's still a marvel of dedicated filmmaking with a very strong main arc, an insightful foray into a future dystopia and a bloody good representation of the human psyche viewed through a dream.
Yes, it's a hard sell, but I admire the Directors for bringing this to life, as it's easily a 20m $ concept shot on a shoestring budget with amazing results. It may not cut as deep as some indy marvels out there, but as a friend recommended me the other day, why constantly give movies on imdb 1 or 10s? Strawberry Mansion confortably sits at a 7, and with a little bit more cash, could have easily pulled an 8.5.
A must watch for any movie lover, or anyone who still have that child-like appreciation for magic, but don't want to be spoon fed a Disney (tm) milquetoast production.
Give it a try, it's better than half the movies coming out in cinema these days, I wish this had show at my local Cinemas. Decent acting and good comedy.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesThe tune Preble plays on the piano is "Row, Row, Row Your Boat", which contains the line "Life is but a dream."
- ConexõesReferenced in Film Junk Podcast: Episode 860: Beast + The Rehearsal (2022)
Principais escolhas
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- How long is Strawberry Mansion?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
Bilheteria
- Orçamento
- US$ 200.000 (estimativa)
- Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 97.526
- Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 34.004
- 20 de fev. de 2022
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 97.526
- Tempo de duração1 hora 31 minutos
- Cor
- Proporção
- 1.78 : 1
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