Trial Run | |
---|---|
Directed by | Melanie Read |
Screenplay by | Melanie Read |
Produced by | Don Reynolds |
Starring | Annie Whittle |
Cinematography | Allen Guilford |
Edited by | Finola Dwyer |
Production companies | Double Feature Investments Cinema and Television Productions |
Release date |
|
Running time | 90 minutes |
Country | New Zealand |
Trial Run is a 1984 New Zealand film directed by Melanie Read starring Annie Whittle. [1] The film is a feminist revision of the thriller genre. [2] [3] [4]
Rosemary Edmonds, a photographer and runner, must temporarily leave her husband and two children when she moves into a remote coastal cottage to carry out an assignment to photograph a colony of rare penguins. It soon becomes apparent that she is being stalked in the cottage by an unknown tormentor. In a twist ending, the "stalker" is revealed to be Rosemary's own teenage son. [5]
Trial Run was the first New Zealand feature film to be written and directed by a woman, [a] and had a largely female cast and crew. [2] [6] Marathon runner Allison Roe and reporter Karen Sims appear briefly as themselves in a television interview seen early in the film.
The film received mixed reviews. In New Zealand, The Press described it as "enjoyable and satisfying in its small way", [7] while Rip It Up felt the film suffered from a "rather sketchy script". [8] In the UK, critic F. Maurice Speed called it a "fascinating and cleverly worked thriller"; [9] Leslie Halliwell and John Elliot found the film generated some suspense but criticised its surprise ending as weak; [10] [11] while Time Out and The Guardian found the final revelation of the culprit's motives to be "preposterous" and "verging on the incomprehensible". [12] [13]
Several film historians have compared Trial Run to Gaylene Preston's Mr. Wrong (1985), another New Zealand thriller with feminist themes. [14] [5] [2] [15]
East Lynne is an 1861 English sensation novel by Ellen Wood, writing as Mrs. Henry Wood. A Victorian-era bestseller, it is remembered chiefly for its elaborate and implausible plot centering on infidelity and double identities. There have been numerous stage and film adaptations.
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