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The Scenesters

2009 American film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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The Scenesters is a 2009 art-house black comedy film written and directed by Todd Berger. The film was made by Los Angeles–based comedy group The Vacationeers and stars Blaise Miller, Suzanne May, Jeff Grace, Kevin M. Brennan, Todd Berger and Sherilyn Fenn. The film was shot in July 2008 in Los Angeles, California, United States, and premiered on October 23, 2009, at the 16th Annual Austin Film Festival.

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Premise

A group of crime scene videographers go after a serial killer.

Cast

Festivals

The Scenesters was selected to screen at the following film festivals:

Awards

Slamdance Film Festival
2010: won Most Interesting Film
Hollywood Film Festival
2009: won Hollywood Award for Best Comedy
Phoenix Film Festival
2010: won Best Screenplay
Edmonton International Film Festival
2009: won Rising Star Award for Best Director Todd Berger
Blue Whiskey Independent Film Festival
2010: won Best of Fest
2010: won Best Screenplay
2010: won Best Director
2010: won Best Editor
2010: won Best Production Designer – Eve McCarney [1]
2010: won Best Actor – Blaise Miller
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Reception

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On Rotten Tomatoes the film has an approval rating of 43% based on reviews from 7 critics, with an average score of 4.67 out of 10.[2]

Amy Handler from Film Threat called The Scenesters "a film that is provocative, intelligent, hilarious – and that moves so swiftly, that you're left gasping for more."[3] Scott Ross from NBC New York said "'The Scenesters' is a gutsy experiment that rewards the viewer's knowledge of Los Angeles, movies and TV with a funny and engaging hyper-meta crime story."[4] Nick W. from USA Today.com had wonderful things to say about the film saying "The Scenesters is the movie I keep telling my friends about. It's funny, inventive and unlike anything I've seen in long time".[5] After the premier of The Scenesters at the Austin Film Festival Sean O'Neal from The A.V. Club praised the film saying it was "A genuinely suspenseful whodunit about a team of wannabe filmmakers exploiting a rash of L.A. murders targeting hipsters...The Scenesters is definitely, if dryly, funny in its satirical take on fame-seeking indie-rock types—boosted by a literally killer soundtrack".[6] Todd Gilchrist from Fearnet called the film "A compelling whodunit that manages to pack more of a punch than the latest retro-noir murder mystery, The Scenesters is a satisfying, successful look at predators and prey, hipsters and Hollywood dreamers, and films and filmmakers that doesn't purely chase its own tail – and better yet, doesn't make moviegoers chase it either... destined to become a cult classic."[7]

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See also

References

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