
Editorial Review:
Description
From the producers of "Urban Pressure" and "Turn", comes a dark and daring coming of age story that peers behind the masks of suburban society to reveal the double-edged sword of human nature and how it can destroy us. Starring Dirk Been, from CBS' first season of "Survivor", it is a haunting look into the lives of a group of characters, who delve inside themselves to find the truth. When tragedy strikes, who will be left standing with the truth to back them up? Zachary Yoshioka, an Arizona State University student and independent, guerilla filmmaker has been creating movies since 1998. With extemely low budgets, an entirely volunteer cast and crew and very creative use of their equipment, the Ballistic Entertainment group literally milks every drop of resources and incorporates it into their projects.
Average customer rating:
|
Synthetic Truth
Starring: Dirk Been , Claire Lunden , Devyan Dumou , Hannah Shields (II) , and Andy Gendron Director: Zachary Yoshioka Manufacturer: Ballistic Entertainment ProductGroup: DVD Binding: DVD ASIN: B0000E1QUN Release Date: 2003-10-01 |
Description
From the producers of "Urban Pressure" and "Turn", comes a dark and daring coming of age story that peers behind the masks of suburban society to reveal the double-edged sword of human nature and how it can destroy us. Starring Dirk Been, from CBS' first season of "Survivor", it is a haunting look into the lives of a group of characters, who delve inside themselves to find the truth. When tragedy strikes, who will be left standing with the truth to back them up? Zachary Yoshioka, an Arizona State University student and independent, guerilla filmmaker has been creating movies since 1998. With extemely low budgets, an entirely volunteer cast and crew and very creative use of their equipment, the Ballistic Entertainment group literally milks every drop of resources and incorporates it into their projects.Customer Reviews:
The 'Gone with the Wind' of teen angst movies!.......2003-10-10
Among the main roles, Nigel (Devyan Dumou) does well, perpetually taking advantage of his best friend (Flynn) without even realising it. On the other hand, Abby (Lunden) never breaks through and her eventual fate seems forced - while still shocking, it's hard to care. Her performance seems to need more screen time; with the movie divided among so many characters, broad strokes would work better. It can be done: both a trio of drug dealers and a bunch of party animals make a lasting impression, despite only appearing in a few scenes.
It's probably a better 90-minute film than a 110-minute one. For example, an early flashback makes its (drunken) point in 20 seconds, then hangs round needlessly. However, the overall success rate is high, and some scenes work every bit as well as in a Hollywood production. My personal favourite had both sides of a relationship simultaneously echoing each others' thoughts, and the editing is a strength throughout.
Technically, the biggest weakness is sound that varies widely in quality, sometimes echoey or near-inaudible. Against this, the use of music is excellent, the original score (by Efrain Becerra and Andy Leach) and tracks from local bands The Strand and Mourning Maxwell provide a fitting backdrop as events hurtle to a dark conclusion. By then, you're no less engrossed in the characters' fates than with any major motion picture. Ballistic have made something to surpass most expectations: if not spinning straw into gold, this is solid silver.
DVD:
DVD
Macho Bionico (REGION 1) (NTSC)
DVD: Horrors From Space Collection (Teenagers from Outer Spa