Month: July 2013

REMEDY was reviewed!


While Remedy is still securing funding for a much wider release, I can assure you that after having seen the film it would be criminal for this small, independent, character study film not to be playing in art house theaters across the country. When you go in to watch a film with a BDSM theme and the most intense, captivating experience you’ll discover is trying to figure out what is going on in the dom’s head, not what’s happening in front of you, you have a film that has accomplished its goal—don’t focus on the sex, focus on the mind. Remedy does that very, very well.

After the CineKink screening, REMEDY was reviewed by MovieBoozer.com — but we had no idea until the director finally sifted through all the paranoia spam in the Twitter inbox for @RemedyTheMovie. Whoops!

Here is the long overdue review of REMEDY!!!

Just to clarify, this is a review of the version of the film that premiered at CineKink on February 27. The film has been subsequently updated and tweaked in preparation for it’s screening as part of the Seattle Erotic Arts Festival on August 4 at the Grand Illusion Theater.

REMEDY is Screening at Seattle Erotic Arts Festival August 3rd

Most of the accepted films will be appearing as part of the Erotic
Short Film Showcase on Sunday, August 4th at 5 pm, but the accepted
feature, Remedy, will be showing on Saturday August 3rd at 5pm
.

So there you have it. A few weeks ago, REMEDY was selected as the ONLY FEATURE to be screened at the Seattle Erotic Arts Festival. This is significant for two reasons: feature films are normally *not* part of their programming, and the rental of the Grand Illusion Cinema was arranged specifically because the festival wanted audiences to see REMEDY at it’s best.

This screening marks the OFFICIAL PREMIERE of the FINAL CUT of the film. CineKink NYC had the honor of screening the penultimate cut, but after taking things back to the lab, shaving a few minutes off, and retweaking the sound, REMEDY is truly ready for her close up.

Tickets for the screening are $12 and can be purchased at Stranger Tickets
or at the Grand Illusion Cinema on the day of the screening. A short Q&A will follow.