Friday, 5 October 2018

Review: Scottish Indie Psychological Thriller, "Far From The Apple Tree"



We would really love this Scottish Indie feature film to do well when it gets released next year. If you like the trailer, please feel free to share it around...
 
Tartan 14 - Far From the Apple Tree
from Year Zero : Tartan Features on Vimeo.
 
The film in question is the Arthouse Psych-Horror, Far From The Apple Tree, starring Netflix-star, Sorcha Groundsell (lead actor in the 2018 shape-shifting horror romance box-set series, The Innocents) and directed by Scottish low budget film director and Indie Music obsessive, Grant McPhee. McPhee's previous features have included documentaries on the history of Scottish labels & bands, such as Big Gold Dream (on the Post-Punk labels Fast Product & Postcard), which was broadcast last year on BBC2: a good year and a bit before the Beeb's Rip It Up: The Story of Scottish Pop and the National Museum of Scotland exhibition of the same name.

Far From The Apple Tree - written by the talented screenwriter Ben Soper and produced by Steven Moore and Olivia Gifford (both producers on the Outlander series) - is number 14 in the Tartan Features series of low-budget-but-high-production-values full-length Scottish independent films made since Grant McPhee's 2014 feature, Sarah's Room
 
It's scheduled to be released some time early next year "through one of the UK's most daring art-house labels", and there will also be selected BFI screenings.

The soundtrack for the film is by songwriter Rose McDowall (who came to fame in the UK in the 1980s as one half of Scottish Post-Punk Pop Duo, Strawberry Switchblade) and Canadian based "electroacoustic music composer and media artist, Shawn Pinchbeck.

Unlike the majority of feature films being made anywhere around the World today, the FFTAT production is notable for having an entirely female cast. We ourselves - being a micro-collective comprising of one woman and one man - were pleased to discover that the crew on the shoot was made up of a similar 50/50 male/female split. Mainstream cinema should take note and learn something from this new, more progressive breed of independent filmmakers. It is also heartening to learn that Grant McPhee and the rest of the Tartan Features / YearZero filmmakers are striving towards paying all crew members the Scottish Living Wage wherever possible. 


Before we go any further - in the interests of transparency - we should disclose our involvement in the production of Far From The Apple Tree. Last year, after reading our Avant Kinema blog post detailing our experiments with shooting Super 8 film using expired filmstock, home processing with household products and handcrafting film with scratches and colours, Grant McPhee invited us to join the crew on the shoot of his latest feature. We were blown away by the generosity and open-ness of this approach and also fascinated to see first-hand how a bigger budget production with full crew and production staff operates.

So, we joined the 2nd Unit for the first two days of shooting in Perthshire in March 2017 - along with performer Ashley Sutherland and photographer Lucas Kao - and we were given free rein to wander the house and its environs in order to help create an authentic looking archive of Super 8 and 16mm film for Grant McPhee. and his editors to draw on whilst making the feature. It was an amazing and quite mind-blowing experience for us, and we were both really impressed by the friendliness and generosity of everybody we encountered. 


Here are some analogue stills we shot of Ashley Sutherland with our Lomography cameras during the two day shoot, whilst setting up shots to be captured in Super 8 and 16mm.

 

apple tree rites - lomography fisheye stills by sarahjane swan & roger simian (scotland) w/ performer Ashley Sutherland


apple tree rites - lomography fisheye stills by sarahjane swan & roger simian (scotland) w/ performer Ashley Sutherland


apple tree rites - lomography fisheye stills by sarahjane swan & roger simian (scotland) w/ performer Ashley Sutherland


apple tree rites - lomography fisheye stills by sarahjane swan & roger simian (scotland) w/ performer Ashley Sutherland


apple tree rites - lomography fisheye stills by sarahjane swan & roger simian (scotland) w/ performer Ashley Sutherland


apple tree rites - lomography fisheye stills by sarahjane swan & roger simian (scotland) w/ performer Ashley Sutherland


apple tree rites - lomography fisheye stills by sarahjane swan & roger simian (scotland) w/ performer Ashley Sutherland


apple tree rites - lomography fisheye stills by sarahjane swan & roger simian (scotland) w/ performer Ashley Sutherland


apple tree rites - lomography fisheye stills by sarahjane swan & roger simian (scotland) w/ performer Ashley Sutherland


apple tree rites - lomography fisheye stills by sarahjane swan & roger simian (scotland) w/ performer Ashley Sutherland


apple tree rites - lomography fisheye stills by sarahjane swan & roger simian (scotland) w/ performer Ashley Sutherland


apple tree rites - lomography fisheye stills by sarahjane swan & roger simian (scotland) w/ performer Ashley Sutherland


apple tree rites - lomography fisheye stills by sarahjane swan & roger simian (scotland) w/ performer Ashley Sutherland


apple tree rites - lomography fisheye stills by sarahjane swan & roger simian (scotland) w/ performer Ashley Sutherland


apple tree rites - lomography fisheye stills by sarahjane swan & roger simian (scotland) w/ performer Ashley Sutherland


apple tree rites - lomography fisheye stills by sarahjane swan & roger simian (scotland) w/ performer Ashley Sutherland


apple tree rites - lomography fisheye stills by sarahjane swan & roger simian (scotland) w/ performer Ashley Sutherland


apple tree rites - lomography fisheye stills by sarahjane swan & roger simian (scotland) w/ performer Ashley Sutherland


The working edit of the Far From The Apple Tree movie, which we were priviliged enough to be allowed to preview recently, was, in our estimation, an exceptional example of the way that certain 21st Century directors are able to draw on their 20th Century influences (in this case the 1960s & 70s arthouse horrors / psychological thrillers which Grant McPhee and writer Ben Soper love so much) to create something utterly fresh, utterly contemporary.
The film, which is based mostly in a grand but spooky Scottish stately home, follows the increasingly fractured and disorientating interactions between up-and-coming artist and intern, Judith (Sorcha Groundsell), and the disfunctional, Mother Figure, artist she admires, Roberta Roslyn (Victoria Liddelle: "The Loch" tv series). Bringing the Scottish story-telling tradition of the Other Self / Doppleganger and the Duality of the Individual - as in Dr Jekyll or Justified Sinner - bang up to date, Judith is hired by Roberta to create an archive around the Lost Girl of the House, Maddy - a near double of Judith herself - whose absence is ever-present.
FFTAT glories in a smorgasbord of filmmaking techniques and formats, both digital and analogue, which helps McPhee and his team reference a whole history of cinema at the same time as looking forwards towards the future of cinema. 
 
We love the film and were honoured to be involved in its production. 
 
Share the trailer around if you like what you see, click on some links below and spread the good word about Far From The Apple Tree...