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Stolen Season

  • 2020
  • 1h 38m
IMDb RATING
5.0/10
2.4K
YOUR RATING
We All Inherit The Moon, Pascal Payant, Abbey Siegworth, and Matthew Bilodeau in Stolen Season (2020)
Stolen Season (2020)
Releases on Itunes and Amazon Prime on May 1st.

Second Feature Film By French Canadian Director Pascal Payant.
Written, Produced And Directed By Pascal Payant

Starring Abbey Siegworth, Matthew Bilodeau, Mike Markoff, Challen Cates, Noelle Toland, Kenz Lawren, Lowell Deo, Burton Binder, Asher Deva and Cecily Crow. 

Score By We All Inherit the Moon
Filmed In Portland, Oregon
Shot with RED Helium 8K

www.pascalpayant.com
www.instagram.com/pascalpayant
www.facebook.com/pascalpayant
Play trailer1:49
1 Video
20 Photos
Drama

A therapist descends into obsession when she uncovers evidence suggesting that her new patient could be the child she surrendered 17 years ago.A therapist descends into obsession when she uncovers evidence suggesting that her new patient could be the child she surrendered 17 years ago.A therapist descends into obsession when she uncovers evidence suggesting that her new patient could be the child she surrendered 17 years ago.

  • Director
    • Pascal Payant
  • Writer
    • Pascal Payant
  • Stars
    • Abbey Siegworth
    • Matthew Bilodeau
    • Mike Markoff
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.0/10
    2.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Pascal Payant
    • Writer
      • Pascal Payant
    • Stars
      • Abbey Siegworth
      • Matthew Bilodeau
      • Mike Markoff
    • 12User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 8 wins & 9 nominations total

    Videos1

    Stolen Season - Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:49
    Stolen Season - Official Trailer

    Photos20

    View Poster
    View Poster
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    View Poster
    + 16
    View Poster

    Top cast12

    Edit
    Abbey Siegworth
    • Ariane Longwood
    Matthew Bilodeau
    Matthew Bilodeau
    • Logan Webb
    Mike Markoff
    Mike Markoff
    • Nathan Longwood
    Challen Cates
    Challen Cates
    • Kristen Webb
    Kenz Lawren
    Kenz Lawren
    • Megan
    Lowell Deo
    Lowell Deo
    • James
    Asher Deva
    Asher Deva
    • Kyle
    Burt Binder
    Burt Binder
    • Liam
    • (as a different name)
    Noelle Toland
    Noelle Toland
    • Stacey
    Cecily Crow
    • Jessie
    Melissa Crosland
    • Lucy
    Dani Alvarado
    Dani Alvarado
    • Diane
    • Director
      • Pascal Payant
    • Writer
      • Pascal Payant
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews12

    5.02.4K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    8MrXAnderson

    Pascal Payant delivers Cinema again!

    Storywise, Pascal Payant crafts a dark suspense thriller that gets under your skin. Our protagonist Arianna with a troubled past goes into spiral obsession finding the "truth" while her brother with "good intentions" consistently intrudes. You start to question which sibling needs the most help. Pascal however contrasts the tension with gentle moments when they share their childhood moments together at their former home. In addition, we also get a positive sense of Arianna's professionalism as someone who "rebuilt there life". Actress Abby Siegworth's nails this quite well, as someone masking her obsessive journey.

    On a visual standpoint, it is always exciting to experience Pascals work. His minimal crew and organic way of filming keeps me wondering how he shot the scripted moments and the larger scenes that was likely a live-event. From his signature natural-lit spaces, horizons and nightclubs, Pascal brings us back to Senior year through the storys centerpiece Logan. We are engaged in the character's Motorcross shots and a memorable live-Football game serving as a breaking point for the character. Pascal again pushes the envelope bringing an "immediate" non-studio look serving the story. I enjoy that immediacy feeling as if I am there.

    Some more visual highlights building the suspense was the "revelation" scene in the driveway. The choice to use a simple Flood light heightened the "truth" conveying Arianna's life is about to crumble losing everything and her profession. In addition, my definite highlight was the climax where she is positioned before a Cathedral structure. Dramatic, exquisitely framed and symbolic of what she has been through and her fate. Furthermore, Pascal's choice of Ocean motifs drove the story and were not merely there for "editing transitions" but rather life renewing its source through Ebb and Flow. He understands the psychological impact of visuals with content.

    Overall Pascal crafts and delivers his signature visual work leaving you an haunting impression. From highly intimate scenes, large set-pieces on top of synth music on a subject of Adoption and Obsession. In terms of his second feature, Pascal's message to the indy filmmakers is to be "unflinching, that there are no excuses to not make your own film"
    10bebebets-60878

    A MUST WATCH INDY FILM!

    Brilliant cinematography! Deep, dark story about obsessions, addictions, regrets & the consequences of one's actions. Beautifully, intensely acted!
    10Monumental-Studio-FR

    A polarizing tale about adoption

    Pascal Payant has become one of indie cinema's most singular figures of late. His slick, eerie style and penchant for perfectly beautiful actors has now become a signature with this sophomore follow-up feature. His first feature, On The Horizon, is what set him on this path in the first place and is available On Demand through Amazon and iTunes. It has many elements of what makes a Pascal Payant film so distinctive: raw emotions that are amplified by self destructive characters who mask an inability to communicate, a pop-based soundtrack and a heavily aesthetic eerie filming style that gives a sense of stepping out of time and looking at a very private story through an artistic framework. This film is not as deliberately glossy as his first attempt, but the emotional tempestuousness is in the same register.

    The film involves Abbey Siegworth, amazing unknown actress portraying therapist Ariane Longwood, desperately trying to connect with Logan (Matthew Bilodeau), her son she was forced to surrendered for adoption 17 years ago, and the tsunami wave of scorching pain she is enduring ever since. The story also focuses on the combative relationship between Logan, prickly 17 years old heartthrob, who is rebelious, and his no-nonsense, conventional adoptive mother Kristen (Challen Cates) who is doing her best to ignore the repeated displays of temper by her son and just decided to start therapy for both of them. The therapist has a personal agenda with the boy and Abbey Siegworth plays the role with a combination of world-weariness and blithe indifference, and turns in a tremendous, complicated performance, elevating the film to an A list level. Late in the film, the monologue Ariane delivers-in which she becomes almost insane with despair-is one of the most breathtaking instances of film acting I can remember in years. For Siegworth's acting alone, the film is a must-see. Add to that Bilodeau's own petulant performance, and Payant's knowing eye for character detail, slick camera set-ups and assured direction, and Stolen Season becomes a blissful character study.

    Payant knows how to lock into this affective fixation and rides it for as long as he can, and I can assure you it's never exhausting or satirical for viewers. The reason is because Payant has no desire to hold back, and he keeps us on our toes with ever creating plot twists that are never too much or unrealistic, even when flirting with incest. If there's a relationship as toxic as the one between Ariane and Logan, he's going to ignore all pretences and be as honest as he can about it. The art of film is not there to soften the pain of abandonment and cool the bleeding scars between mother and son. Exposing its ugliness and intensity is the very thing that allows for cathartic closure. He exorcises these demons because it is a property of the healing process, and he is as generous as can be about it.

    There is a fearlessness to Payant that I admire as a filmmaker. I'll admit that I want him to get famous and to show his films outside of the streaming distribution circuit. He deserves to get into theatres and reach the generation of moviegoers that want something else than studio tentpoles superhero movies.
    10john-stanton264

    Visually Arresting Film

    Pascal Payant channels Terrence Malick in this film, while adding his own atmospheric spin. The visuals are captivating and like Malick, appear like a visual poem on the screen. The performances from actors are raw and genuine and the cinematography is lights-out good. Pascal Payant is one of the best independent filmmakers working today.
    10robertscelia

    Beautifully done.

    This beautiful film highlights Oregon's unique culture. Beautiful aerial shots are shown throughout the film, really setting the tone. I want to say this movie made me feel the same way I felt when I watched American Beauty, and Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind. Ominous and beautiful simultaneously.

    Abby is incredible as the lead, and Matthew is amazing in his first film!

    Really fascinating story, you will not be able to guess the ending.....

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Film debut of Matthew Bilodeau.

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • May 1, 2020 (Canada)
    • Country of origin
      • Canada
    • Official site
      • Director Website
    • Language
      • English
    • Production company
      • Y-US Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 38m(98 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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