Dirty Singles

Dirty Singles
Directed by Alex Pugsley
Produced by Melanie Windle
Written by Alex Pugsley
Starring
Music by
  • Joseph Murray
  • Lodewijk Vos
Cinematography Jason Tan
Edited by Adam Locke-Norton
Production
company
Distributed by
Release dates
  • March 1, 2014 (2014-03-01)
Running time
80 minutes
Country Canada
Language English

Dirty Singles is a 2014 Toronto romantic-comedy feature film written and directed by Alex Pugsley and executive produced by Global Mechanic Media and Shaftesbury Films. The film was released by Video Services Corporation in Canada in September 2014 and was released in the USA in March 2016. The film is now available in the USA on iTunes and InDemand.

Production

The film was cast in October–November 2012 and shot in December 2012 over fourteen days and thirty-one locations in the Dundas-Ossington area.

Plot

Dirty Singles is a feature-length comedy-drama about a community of friends a few years after university. It’s about that time in your life when you’re in your first real job and your first real adult relationship—the one you think might just last forever. In this clique of friends, Jack-and-Megan, the perfect couple—perfect house, perfect jobs, perfect hair—turn out to be not so perfect. This revelation sends a shock through their little world, and soon the ‘break-up virus,’ and its after-effect, the ‘inappropriate hook up virus,’ make their way through the rest of the characters. But somewhere in this year of living ridiculously, playing grown-up must become being grown-up—and the same-old, same-old you thought would last forever proves to be as fleeting as the pop songs of three years ago. Dirty Singles is a naturalistic coming-of-age movie about twenty-somethings generally—and specifically it’s about young adults who happen to live in and around Parkdale in Toronto as they take their first faltering, glorious steps toward maturity.

Cast

Release

The film premiered at the 2014 Calgary International Film Festival. The film has also screened at the 2014 Vancouver International Film Festival, the 2015 Kingston Canadian Film Festival, and the 2015 Newport Beach Film Festival. The film is now available in the USA on iTunes and InDemand; as well as in the United Kingdom on iTunes and Google; and also available in the following countries on iTunes: Austria, Australia, Belgium, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Denmark, Cyprus, Finland, Greece, Hong Kong, Hungary, Ireland, Israel, Japan, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Macau, Malta, Mauritius, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Portugal, South Africa, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan, and Thailand.

Critical reception

Dirty Singles has received generally positive reviews from critics.

Eric Volmers of the Calgary Herald writes, "Dirty Singles works because it is believable, written with an ear for natural dialogue and performed seamlessly by the cast." [1]

Steve Gow of the Metro News comments that "Dirty Singles is a well-balanced movie that’s reminiscent of such multi-layered rom-coms as Love Actually and Crazy Stupid Love.".[2]

"The characters are real people," remarks Jude Klassen in Movie Entertainment Magazine, "sometimes gorgeous, and sometimes a little hung-over and defeated. The dialogue is deadly sharp without being overtly honed, a credit to both the writing and the acting."[3]

And Bruce DeMara of The Toronto Star, in a three-out-of-four starred review, writes, "The dialogue crackles throughout with profanity, wise cracks and well-observed truisms as the players variously grapple with infidelity, STDs and achieving orgasm."[4]

Reviewers consistently singled out the performances of Lauren Ash and Ennis Esmer, who were nominated for multiple awards for their performances as Carol and Sean, winning Best Female Performance in a Feature and Best Male Performance in a Feature respectively at the 2015 Canadian Comedy Awards.

Prizes and Awards

References

Norman Wilner. NOW Magazine. "To the movies, with love." February 13, 2015. https://nowtoronto.com/movies/to-the-movies-with-love/

William Brownridge. Toronto Film Scene. "Indie Tuesdays: Dirty Singles." July 21, 2015. http://thetfs.ca/2015/07/21/indie-tuesdays-dirty-singles/

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/27/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.