Description
MEMOIR OF A SNAIL MOVIE REVIEW
There are some filmmakers out there that appear to have an agenda to make the audience feel utter despair and sadness. Much like his previous film Mary & Max, Adam Elliot’s newest picture, Memoir of a Snail, drives home how truly terrible it can be to just exist in this world. Elliot again uses stop-motion animation to deliver a devastatingly heartfelt and tragic story surrounding our main character, Grace Pudel (Sarah Snook). As Grace’s only friend Pinky (Jacki Weaver) dies, she begins to tell her pet snail how she ended up there with Pinky. Through brilliant flashback sequences and a deft comedic outlook on her offbeat upbringing, Grace describes her relationship with her brother Gilbert (Kodi Smit-McPhee). After their father passes away, they’re split up and sent to separate parts of Australia, where the film is based, and have to deal with very different situations. Grace has a more or less stable relationship with her swinging foster parents whereas Gilbert grows up in an extreme religious household that tests his patience and sanity every step of the way. They keep in contact through letters and build each other’s hope that they will one day see each other again. It’s an extraordinarily bittersweet tale that our critics Wright, Beau, Marco, and Eric could not get enough of. Traditionally, Elliot’s films end on a tragically bittersweet moment, but this time around, when we need it most, he ends on a hopeful note.
OFFICIAL WEBSITE/TRAILER
DIRECTED BY: Adam Elliot
STARRING: Sarah Snook, Kodi Smit-McPhee, Eric Bana, Magda Szubanski, Dominique Pinon, Tony Armstrong, Paul Capsis, Bernie Clifford, Davey Thompson, Charlotte Belsey, Mason Litsos, Nick Cave, Jacki Weaver
YOUR REVIEWERS
Wright Sulek (Screener Squad, Digital Noise, Highly Suspect Reviews, Trash in the Can, Audio Editor)
Wright hails from the northern suburbs of Dallas, Texas. His passion for filmmaking brought him to Austin to study and make movies. Since then he’s had his hand in acting, writing, and directing his own short films with numerous like-minded film geeks he’s met along his journey. His newest interest has brought him into the podcasting world. He co-hosted a few different movie related podcasts such as ‘And Now This’ and ‘The Match Cut’. He currently co-hosts with longtime friend, Eric Samaniego, where they talk shop about the grimiest, trashiest, lost gems of movies on their show, ‘Trash in the Can’. Wright also guests and hosts reviews on Screener Squad and Highly Suspect Reviews as well as co-hosts Digital Noise with Chris Cox.
Eric Samaniego (Trash in the Can, Highly Suspect Reviews)
Eric is a multi-award show watching, sometimes comedian, sometimes writer that began life as a Muppet and 1930’s screwball comedy obsessed goon and continues to carry a torch for all things felt and funny. With a passion for genre films, poor taste, and whiskey, he and co-conspirator, Wright Sulek, indulge in the best/worst films the world has to offer with One of Us’s podcast, ‘Trash in the Can’. When not podding, Eric works as an American military officer, statesman, and Founding Father who served as the first president of the United States from 1789 to 1797.
Beau Paul (Highly Suspect Reviews, The Original Gentlemen, Screener Squad)
Beau Paul is an Austin native, an actor, and a writer. Sometimes all at once! Previously he has attempted to be an internet entertainer (the funny ha-ha kind, not the naked moneymaking kind) at Spill.com, and now here on OneOfUs.net. You can read his pithy witticisms and the retweeted material of funnier, cleverer people on a href="https://twitter.