The Passing (2015 film) explained

The Passing
Native Name:Yr Ymadawiad
Director:Gareth Bryn
Producer:Kate Crowther, Ed Talfan
Starring:Mark Lewis Jones
Distributor:Miracle Communications [1]
Runtime:89 minutes
Country:United Kingdom
Language:Welsh
English (separate versions)
Budget:c. £540,000[2]

The Passing (Welsh: Yr Ymadawiad) is a 2015 Welsh drama film directed by Gareth Bryn and written by Ed Talfan. It had its UK premiere on 10 March 2016 at the Wales One World (WOW) Film Festival in Aberystwyth, with a general release date of 8 April 2016.

Synopsis

Following a car crash in a remote part of Wales, Iwan and Sara find themselves in a river with Sara unconscious. They are rescued by Stanley, who carries Sara back to his isolated house in a cold, wet landscape above the river.[3] Stanley puts Sara to bed and she slowly recovers.

The couple wonder about their solitary host, who is a man of few words. Stanley carries on with his life, preparing food, fetching water and digging a well on the hillside below the house. As the days pass and the couple recover from their trauma, elements of their past are revealed, suggesting they are running from somewhere or something. They consider the possibility of staying long term. "Everything we need is here," says Sara. "We can stop running."

Stanley shows a voyeuristic fascination towards the couple, particularly Sara while she is recuperating in the house. Sara talks to Stanley and he reveals some of his past. Iwan becomes jealous of this developing relationship with his girlfriend. Iwan eventually confronts Stanley outside the house and, either deliberately pushed or by accident, ends up falling down the well.

Meanwhile Sara, when she attempts to wash herself in the basin, has been having unexplained flashbacks about drowning. In a final twist during the last few minutes of the film, Sara's flashback reveals the true nature of her situation.

Cast

Production

Talfan originally imagined the film to be without dialogue, but later conceded some talking would be required (though the first ten minutes of the film are without dialogue).[4] The film was shot near Tregaron in West Wales. The film crew were based for four weeks in a disused school building without any mobile phone reception, which Bryn says instilled a necessary "siege mentality".[5] With a small budget and no pressure from big financial backers, Bryn says he was able to set about making exactly the film he wanted.

Back to back versions were recorded in Welsh and in English. Much of the film was recorded using hand held cameras and natural lighting.

Reception

The film had its UK premiere on 10 March 2016 at the Wales One World (WOW) Film Festival in Aberystwyth,[6] with a general release date of 8 April 2016. It had its television debut on the Welsh language channel, S4C, on 13 August 2017.[7]

The Hollywood Reporter summarised the film as containing "far too few jolts to appeal to garden variety horror fans. But the highbrow contingent will respond well at fests, and Bryn's quiet confidence earns him a spot on filmmaker-to-watch lists." Jones is described as "good at using minimal cues to suggest a large interior world. It's a performance intriguing enough that one might have been content to watch Stanley spend the length of a feature interacting only with himself and his land, saying nothing aloud, in Welsh or otherwise."

Similarly The Guardian concludes that the "gradual excavation, with its spectral presences, may disappoint those who demand more bang for their buck", but the assured acting and melancholy feel "ensures it lingers longer in the mind than most homegrown genre fare".[8]

Based on a small number of reviews, the Rotten Tomatoes website gave The Passing a 63% approval rating.[9]

Awards

The Passing/Yr Ymadawiad received a silver medal at both the World International Television Festival and New York Film and Television Awards. It won a Single Drama Award at the Celtic Media Festival in Dungarvan, Ireland.[10] At the 2016 BAFTA Cymru awards Ed Talfan won Best Author award and the Best Production Design award went to Tim Dickel for Yr Ymadawiad.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Yr Ymadawiad (2015) . . 17 December 2017.
  2. Web site: The Passing (2015) . IMDb . 17 December 2017.
  3. News: John DeFore . 'The Passing' ('Yr Ymadawiad'): Film Review . . 23 November 2015 . 17 December 2017.
  4. News: Joe Richards . The Passing/Yr Ymadawiad Director Gareth Bryn: Film Interview . Buzz Magazine . 7 April 2016 . 17 December 2017.
  5. News: Eryl Crump . Cinema showing for Prestatyn director's first movie . . North Wales . 1 April 2017 . 17 December 2017.
  6. News: Rachel Mainwaring . 7 strange but stunning locations to make a movie (as chosen by the WOW Film Festival) . . 4 March 2016 . 17 December 2017.
  7. News: Daniel Bissett . Première of the gripping, dramatic film Yr Ymadawiad . . North Wales . 12 August 2017 . 17 December 2017.
  8. News: Mike McCahill . The Passing review – slow-burning terror and sadness . . 7 April 2016 . 17 December 2017.
  9. Web site: The Passing (Yr Ymadawiad) . . 17 December 2017.
  10. News: Yr Ymadawiad yn cipio gwobr Geltaidd . . 25 April 2016 . Welsh . 17 December 2017.