nzherald.co.nz

Movie review: How to Meet Girls From a Distance

By Francesca Rudkin
11:30 AM Thursday Nov 1, 2012
A scene from stalker comedy How to Meet Girls From a Distance.  Photo / Supplied

A scene from stalker comedy How to Meet Girls From a Distance. Photo / Supplied

The inaugural winner of the Make My Movie Feature Film Competition is a wonderfully kooky and entertaining romantic comedy.

The team behind How to Meet Girls from A Distance should be applauded for doing the seemingly impossible by making a film in six months, and, even better, for making it genuinely funny.

In January this year this film was just an idea with a poster and tagline, which was the entry criteria for the online competition, supported by the NZ Film Commission, NZ on Air and nzherald.co.nz.

By July, and for a $100,000 budget, this "peeping tom rom-com" had been written, shot, edited and delivered for its debut at the New Zealand International Film Festival.

It's an impressive effort for first time director Dean Hewison and his co-writing team of Sam Dickson and Richard Falkner, with Falkner also staring as the shy, unlucky-in-love Toby.

After an unforunate incident attempting to pick up a lesbian at a cafe, Toby prefers to get to know potential girlfriends before meeting them. This, by its very nature, requires extensive stalking and a range of unethical and illegal goings-on.

The latest girl to have this due diligence inflicted on her is young SPCA worker Phoebe Jennings, played by newcomer Scarlet Hemingway.

There are plenty of awkward moments as Toby woos Phoebe, and while on paper Toby could seem a creepy pervert, in the hands of Falkner he's a shy young man who gets a little carried away.

Hewison and team made a good decision to keep Toby's audience-friendly; he's funnier for it and makes for a sweet, if a little messed up, anti-hero.

Comedian Jonathan Brugh is another standout as Carl, Toby's "love coach". Toby's mother pays for him to have five sessions with the eccentric Carl, whose philosophy towards girls is basically "high confidence, low standards".

Largely responsible for the laugh-out-loud moments, Brugh deservedly gets to deliver the film's cleverest gag in the third act, which acts as a reminder this script is sharper and filled with more twists and turns than it first seems.

While there are signs it was made in a hurry, and the performances vary, How to Meet Girls From A Distance is a great example of what can be achieved when talent meets opportunity.

This wacky, witty lesson on falling in love has shown the Make My Movie Feature Film Competition to be a considerable success.

How to Meet Girls From a Distance
Cast: Richard Falkner, Jonathan Brugh Director: Dean Hewison Running
Time: 85 mins
Rating: R13 (offensive language, sexual references)
Verdict: A funny New Zealand comedy.
Rating: 4/5

- TimeOut

By Francesca Rudkin
Henny (New Zealand) | 01:40PM Thursday, 01 Nov 2012
Why does every NZ-made flick always get top ratings from local critics, no matter how bad they are? I'm not saying this film in particular is bad - although the trailer isn't promising - but this misguided "Gotta support the locals!" attitude of NZ critics is frustrating, because you know you cannot rely on their reviews when choosing something to watch.

A movie ticket is expensive, as is the food and drinks, and then you have to sit through untold commercials before you even get to see it: with so much competition out there for our meagre dollars, I'd like to know what I'm spending my money on. Or wasting it, as the case may be. So how about some honesty, NZ critics? Just for once.
Hugh Sundae (New Zealand) | 02:15PM Thursday, 01 Nov 2012
Hi Henny

You should first know - I have ties to the film and to the website you read the review on.

What you speak of may well be a case of the boy who cried wolf. This is a great flick.

So much so that if you email me your bank account details to hugh dot sundae at nzherald.co.nz ASAP and also what cinema/time you'd like to go to (double ticket) I'll book/pay for your ticket.

Two conditions. You go and see it either tonight or tomorrow night, and you give your honest opinion of it here in the comments.

Cheers

Hugh
Hugh Lilly (Auckland Region) | 03:05PM Thursday, 01 Nov 2012
This is the best New Zealand movie since "Boy," in my opinion-and I generally don't like the films we make in this country.
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