Separation (2013 film)

Separation is a 2013 Canadian thriller film directed by Greg White and his feature film directorial debut. The film was released on video on demand on April 15, 2013 and stars Sarah Manninen and Peter Stebbings as a married couple struggling to save their lives as well as their marriage.[1]

Separation
Directed byGreg White
Produced byPeter Apostolopoulos,
Greg White
Written byGreg White
StarringSarah Manninen, Peter Stebbings, Dmitry Chepovetsky
CinematographyPasha Patriki
Edited byJamie Franklin
Production
company
Birchmount Entertainment
Distributed byGravitas Ventures
Release date
  • April 15, 2013 (2013-04-15)
Running time
81 minutes
CountryCanada
LanguageEnglish

Synopsis

Liz (Sarah Manninen) and Jack (Peter Stebbings) are a seemingly average couple that have moved into a new house in the hopes of rekindling their failing marriage. This effort is made more difficult by their troubled daughter Angie (Arcadia Kendal) and an unhappy mother-in-law (Barbara Gordon) that's determined to find fault in everything the couple does. When the family hears about a potential serial killer in the neighborhood, things begin to grow tense and they begin to suspect everyone around them- especially their strange neighbor Geoffrey (Dmitry Chepovetsky).

Cast

Reception

Critical reception for Separation has been largely positive and Fearnet drew positive comparisons between the film and a Twilight Zone episode.[2] Much of the film's praise centered on its acting and pacing,[3] as multiple reviewers felt that the slow development in the film heightened the story's tension.[4] Bloody Disgusting gave the film a positive rating and stated that it "has as a solid story and the leads carry the movie through its rough patches".[5]

gollark: Which sound very fancy, although I have no idea how they work.
gollark: On a Discord server for another modern note-taking thing I'm on someone was talking about "n-grams" and "latent dirichlet allocation".
gollark: There are also, if NLP were not so bee, *many* useful approaches I could take to categorize things efficiently.
gollark: I'm likely to implement (eventually) fuzzy page name matching where it tells you stuff *like* what you spelt. Right now the search just looks for pages containing the same word (give or take endings, SQLite uses some "porter stemming" algorithm).
gollark: > "nice editor" sounds good. for instanceI mostly just mean that it will, for instance, keep your current indentation/list level if you add a newline. I can't think of much other useful stuff, markdown is simple enough.> it'd be cool to have a way to embed links to other notes a way that's as easy as adding a tenor gif to a discord messageYou can, it's just `[[link text:note name]]` or `[[note name]]` if they're both the same. "Nice editor" may include something which shows fuzzy matches > sematic taggingI thought about tagging but realized that "bidirectional links" were *basically* the same thing; if you put `[[bees]]` into a document, then the `Bees` page has a link back to it.

References

  1. "Exclusive Clip: A bath get bloody in Separation!". JoBlo. Retrieved 15 February 2014.
  2. Weinberg, Scott. "FEARNET Movie Review: 'Separation'". Fearnet. Retrieved 15 February 2014.
  3. "AICN HORROR looks at ERRORS OF THE HUMAN BODY! SEPARATION! HOME SWEET HOME! TIED! NINE MILES DOWN! HOUSE OF BAD! LUSTER! THE SLUMBER PARTY MASSACRE! A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET Remake!". AICN. Retrieved 15 February 2014.
  4. Hallam, Scott. "Separation (review)". Dread Central. Retrieved 15 February 2014.
  5. Harley, David. "'Separation' Is A Home Invasion Film With Some Hallucinogenic Madness". Bloody Disgusting. Retrieved 15 February 2014.
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