Riot Girls | |
Director: | Jovanka Vuckovic |
Producer: | Lauren Grant |
Starring: | Madison Iseman Paloma Kwiatkowski Munro Chambers Jenny Raven |
Music: | Peter Chapman |
Cinematography: | Celiana Cárdenas |
Editing: | Maureen Grant |
Studio: | Clique Pictures |
Distributor: | Cranked Up Films levelFILM |
Runtime: | 81 minutes |
Country: | Canada |
Language: | English |
Riot Girls is a 2019 Canadian post-apocalyptic science fiction film, directed by Jovanka Vuckovic.
Set in the town of Potter's Bluff, where a mysterious virus has killed all the adults and left society entirely in the hands of rival teen gangs, the film stars Madison Iseman and Paloma Kwiatkowski as Nat and Scratch, a lesbian couple who must go behind enemy lines to rescue Nat's brother Jack (Alexandre Bourgeois) after he is captured by the wealthy and powerful West Side gang led by jock Jeremy (Munro Chambers).
In September 2016, Clique Pictures announced that Jovanka Vuckovic was to direct the apocalyptic horror film.[1] With financing procured from Telefilm Canada, Head Gear Films, the Northern Ontario Heritage Fund, the Ontario Media Development Corporation, Search Engine Films, Urban Post Production, She Wolf Films, and the Harold Greenberg Fund, the cast was announced in October 2017, as well as the start of filming.[2] [3]
The film was shot in Parry Sound, Hamilton, Ontario and Toronto.[4] XYZ Films handled sales for North America, with Alliance Media Partners in charge of international.[5] In January 2019, Cranked Up Films acquired the U.S. distribution rights from XYZ Films.[6]
The Globe and Mails Anne T. Donahue gave the film 3.5/4 stars, writing, "Thanks to Iseman and Kwiatkowski's heartwarming chemistry, Collins's sharp dialogue and Vuckovic's pointed direction, you find yourself running in step with two young women who are smart, interesting, brave and brilliantly capable."[7] Katie Walsh of the Los Angeles Times wrote, "despite its audacious premise and style, Riot Girls feels at times underwritten, a few of the performances under-baked. Kwiatkowski and Iseman carry the film, but such a sprawling world is heavy lifting. Nevertheless, Vuckovic ably showcases her fetchingly energetic aesthetic."[8]
John DeFore of The Hollywood Reporter wrote, "Appealing cinematography and engaging use of split-frame comic-book transitions are the closest the film comes to the excitement of 1990s DIY scene-making; the rest is just derivative genre filler."[9]
The film received five Canadian Screen Award nominations at the 8th Canadian Screen Awards in 2020, for Achievement in Art Direction/Production Design (Jennifer Morden and Danny Haeberlin), Achievement in Make-Up (Brandi Boulet and Chris Bridges), Achievement in Hair (Dann Campbell), Achievement in Music – Original Score (Peter Chapman), and Achievement in Music – Original Song (Peter Chapman and Leslie Seaforth for "We Run the World").[10]