Bedrooms (film)

Bedrooms is a 2010 drama film directed and written by Youssef Delara. Starring Julie Benz,[1] Moon Bloodgood, Sarah Clarke, Xander Berkeley, Dee Wallace and Barry Bostwick. It premieres August 20, 2010 at the Los Angeles Latino Film Festival 2010.[2]

Bedrooms
Directed by
  • Youssef Delara
  • Michael D. Olmos
  • Victor Teran
Produced by
  • Youssef Delara
  • Amir Delara
  • Victor Teran
  • Maury Rogow
  • Shab Azma
Written by
  • Youssef Delara
  • Wynne Renz
  • Victor Teran
  • Rebecca Woolf
Starring
Music byThe Angel
CinematographyBen Kufrin
Edited by
  • Eric R. Brodeur
  • Youssef Delara
Distributed by
  • Cima Productions
  • Castle2000 Films
  • Olmos Productions
Release date
Running time
85 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Plot

Bedrooms is about the exploration of relationships between humans, the tough choices we have to face to see them work or need to move on and the complications. Julian and Beth are a married couple at the vital turning point of their young relationship. In another, Anna and Harry are a married couple who are suffering from infidelity, while Sal [a pizza delivery boy] unwittingly becomes the ultimate reason of their conflict. Marnie and Roger are a retired couple who have had a long but unusual relationship together. Janet is a divorced mother of ten-year-old twins who decide to create their own separate spaces in the room they share by building a wall out of all their toys.

Cast

gollark: There's Bucklescript(-TEA), but I've found it awful to use.
gollark: It's a shame really. I like Elm-the-library and Elm-the-syntax but not Elm-the-language-and-community-and-also-tooling.
gollark: With the same hashing algorithm and same format, or...?
gollark: That's actually one of the best ways to put it if you want people to spend several seconds wondering "what?".
gollark: Also also, "convention over configuration" being stupid. Yes, the choice of four spaces vs two isn't too significant, but being able to choose means you'll have code you can possibly read a bit more easily, and also public/privateness via *capitalization* just (in my opinion) looks ugly and is annoying if you want to change privacy.

References


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