6 Festivals is a 2022 Australian drama film directed by Macario De Souza and starring Rory Potter, Yasmin Honeychurch and Rasmus King.[1]
6 Festivals | |
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Directed by | Macario de Souza |
Screenplay by |
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Produced by |
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Starring |
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Cinematography | Hugh Miller |
Edited by | Ahmad Halimi |
Music by | Blessed |
Production companies |
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Running time | 95 minutes |
Country | Australia |
Language | English |
Plot
editThis article needs a plot summary. (May 2024) |
Cast
edit- Rory Potter as James
- Yasmin Honeychurch as Summer
- Rasmus King as Maxie
- Guyala Bayles as Marley
- Kyuss King as Kane
- Briony Williams as Sue
Reception
editOn review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 100% based on 4 reviews.[2]
In Time Out, Stephen A. Russell gives it 4 stars and states, "A monument to Australia's thriving music scene, it will have you whooping with joy one minute, then fighting back the tears the next. Destined to be a cult hit, it even made this reviewer, who thought his festival-hopping days were long behind him, reconsider jumping in the back of a ute, heading to a bush doof and getting lit. That’s some achievement."[3] Writing in The Sydney Morning Herald, Paul Byrnes gave it 3 stars, stating, "The movie has deep reserves of energy and spirit. Who cares if it lacks a little polish when it has a strong sense of life?" [4] The Guardians' Luke Buckmaster gives it a 2-star review, finishing, "Overt emotionalising has a way of corroding everything, turning the best of dramatic intentions (and what film isn’t well intended?) into schmaltzy goo. Young viewers will probably approach 6 Festivals wanting something fun and mildly rebellious – like drinking goon straight from the bag before sneaking into a festival – but discover a maudlin experience instead."[5]
References
edit- ^ Mathieson, Craig (10 August 2022), "How Bra Boys director made his new movie sound like teen spirit", The Sydney Morning Herald
- ^ "6 Festivals". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved 21 May 2024.
- ^ Russell, Stephen A (19 August 2022), "6 Festivals", Time Out
- ^ Byrnes, Paul (9 August 2022), "Full of bands, 6 Festivals gets the danger and excitement of live music", The Sydney Morning Herald
- ^ Buckmaster, Luke (11 August 2022), "6 Festivals review – schmaltzy coming-of-age drama goes for the heartstrings", The Guardian