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::THEATRE NEWS::
LE Newsletter - March 11, 2010
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At Home By Myself ... With You: Actors Shine In Canadian
Rom-Com
Source:
www.thestar.com
- Peter Howell
At Home By Myself
... With You
  (out
of 4)
Starring Kristin Booth, Aaron Abrams and Shauna MacDonald.
Directed by Kris Booth. 85 minutes. At the Royal. PG
(March 05, 2010) One of two micro-budgeted Canadian movies
playing the Royal this week (the other is Zooey & Adam),
At Home By Myself ... With You
has already earned some attention due to its
director's unique efforts to get the money to make it.
Unlucky with the various funding agencies, Toronto filmmaker
Kris Booth went with metaphorical hat in hand to friends,
colleagues and strangers. A Facebook page named "I'm Making a
Movie With Pocket Change" aided his campaign. After raising
$42,000, he set to work on this debut feature with a similarly
plucky group of local actors.
Like so many Canadian filmmakers who've had to operate under
severe budget constraints, Booth has limited the number of
locations needed for his production to one (hey, it worked for
Vincenzo Natali with Cube).
In this case, it's the brightly coloured apartment home of Romy
(Kristin Booth, no relation to the director), a young agoraphobe
who has not left her place in six years.
It's easy to see why she believes that "bad things happen" when
she goes outside, seeing as previous excursions led to the
tragic deaths of her parents, her first boyfriend and her dog.
They also inspired the other phobias (e.g., lobsters, opening
boxes) that add further complications to her daily life and her
career as a travel agent.
Romy clearly needs a reason to change and he arrives in the form
of a handsome new neighbour who coyly refuses to tell her his
name. Shenanigans ensue as they try to cope with each other's
many foibles.
All romantic comedies thrive or wither based on the quality of
the obstacles that stand between the would-be lovers and their
goal of conjugal bliss. Unfortunately, the obstacles in At
Home By Myself ... With You are too silly and thinly
conceived. As a result, the people on screen often seem like
walking, talking collections of cute quirks rather than
characters worth caring about.
Yet the film does have its charms, largely thanks to its cast.
Equally adept at light comic roles and more harrowing turns,
Kristin Booth was a standout performer in two other recent
Toronto indies, This Beautiful City and Young People
F***ing. The latter also featured a fun performance by Aaron
Abrams, her co-star here.
As for their castmates, Shauna MacDonald and Canadian stage
veteran Rosemary Dunsmore make the most of smaller parts while
Gordon Pinsent serves as the tale's narrator.
Though Pinsent's voiceover and several animated interludes up
the whimsy factor to dangerously high levels, the lively
performances make At Home By Myself ... With You worth a
trip outside your own home. |
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