Interview| John Charles Meyer
John Charles Meyer is the producer of “Dave Made a Maze”, a submission in this year’s Calgary Underground Film Festival. Our own Daniel Melvill Jones sat down with him…
Interview| Karam Gill
Daniel Melville Jones reflects on his interview with Karam Gill, director of G-Funk…
Quick Hits from CUFF | 78/52, Dave Made a Maze, Tony Conrad: Completely in the Present
These capsule reviews are part of an ongoing series covering films appearing in the 2017 Calgary Underground Film Festival, published simultaneously with www.danielmelvilljones.com. For a guide to this year’s CUFF, click here. For full reviews on Reel World Theology of…
Review| Some Freaks
Some Freaks is an astonishing debut that cuts deep, shattering open the high school drama of the misfits falling in love narrative to reveal a longing for human connection. This review is part of an ongoing series covering films appearing…
A Guide to the Calgary Underground Film Festival
Reel World Theology is represented at the Calgary Underground Film Festival (CUFF) by Daniel Melville Jones and Joshua Crabb. This post serves as your guide for what to look for if you’re in attendance. Check back here regularly for updates……
Review| My Entire High School Sinking Into the Sea
While featuring bold style choices and exceptionally creative animation, the increasingly dark violence directed at students spoiled My Entire High School Sinking Into the Sea. This review is part of an ongoing series covering films appearing in the 2017 Calgary…
Review| G-Funk
G-Funk is a laid-back and enjoyable chronicle of the early days of West Coast hip-hop, featuring and produced by some of the genre’s most famous luminaries. This review is part of an ongoing series covering films appearing in the 2017 Calgary…
Review| David Lynch: The Art of Life
The Art Life is an engrossing and richly textured mediation on the correlation between one’s life and one’s art, with much to offer both fans and strangers of the director’s work. This review is part of an ongoing series covering…
Review| Toni Erdmann
Toni Erdmann is about the lengths one might go to pursue someone and the ways we mask such a longing for connection under a facade of professional ambition. It’s about the clash that can occur when an eccentric personality plants…
Review| Paterson
It’s Monday and the early morning sun cast an amber glow to the white undershirt of Paterson (Adam Driver) and the brown skin of his wife (Golshifteh Farahani). Paterson sleepily rolls over and picks his wristwatch off the bedside table.…