|

AROUSAL
Produced, Written and Directed by Sharon
Hyman
Starring Sharon Hyman, Phillip Roth,
Kevin Segal and Naomi Levine
Sharon Hyman's "Arousal": 5 Snowballs
rating (out of five). The
best possible date movie ever made. B-movie meister Sam Arkoff would
have been proud. He said that: "Sex is the answer to an exhibitor's
dreams. For the box office, I mean. You can't get an ingredient in most
movies that draws better than sex. Of course, you must use it wisely."
Hyman is wise. She
should be given immediate carte blanche to do a feature. Now.
Hyman is
our Woodette Allen. Funny, controversial, gender-dividing, a
performance docomedy about relationships, men, women, positive neurosis
and fantasy. What more do you want?
Peter
Wintonick
POV Magazine
Arousal: Montreal one-woman film
industry Sharon Hyman writes, directs, produces and stars in a clever,
rueful and talky 35-minute video about the increasingly debilitating
things women and men say to each other when they're cooped up in an
apartment for too long...
John
Griffin
Montreal Gazette
Taking a more empirical approach to reality--with no crew, herself as
director, writer and lead actor--Arousal stakes out the intimate space
of an apartment building to chart the naked truth.
Using a home video camera and a host of friends, Hyman says she was
able to realize her dream of shooting an entire film -- without ever
leaving the house.
Annie
Ilkow
Montreal
Mirror
Shot with a Hi-8 video camera,
no budget, and lots of friends, Arousal could easily be overlooked at
the festival.But as Hyman pointed out, "you get out of the festival as
much as you put in."
She added, "the fact that my film can be shown at
a major international film festival is inspirational. It lets others
know that they don't need a big budget, just a good idea and a lot of
passion."
Martin
Siberok
The Globe
and Mail
|
WORRIED
Produced,
Written and Directed by
Sharon Hyman and Naomi Levine
Starring Sharon Hyman and Naomi Levine
Worried is what feminist film-makers/improv writers/stars/sole cast
members Sharon Hyman and Naomi Levine call an auto-documentary.
It’s about them! them! them!, shot by them! them! them! - and
a tripod.
But because Hyman and Levine are also bright, articulate,
funny, outward-looking, reasonably normal and approximately 32.5 years
of age, what they have to say has broad appeal, and not simply to other
women.
In the course of one tight 30-minute
film, they wring hands and crack jokes over meditation, apartments,
acupuncture, makeup, modeling, birthday slumber parties, personality
and how to get one, home decorating, womanly chores, sex,
relationships, self-esteem, male harassment, Rudolph the Red-Nosed
Reindeer, life, laundry, the heartbreak of improperly cleaned clothes -
and worrying.
"I worry that I worry," says
Hyman in Worried, and you recognize immediately that this woman knows
her way around the topic.She makes Woody Allen look relaxed.
Mind you,
Woody’s films always feature Woody’s anxieties
disguised as someone else’s. Hyman and Levine are more
honest. They put their insecurities where everyone can see them, and
claim them as their own.
John
Griffin
Montreal Gazette
Worried is a short film that
illuminates and resonates. In the unemphatic language of ordinary
speech these two women (filmmaker, the lovely Sharon Hyman, and her
closest friend) talk about life and illuminate all its intricate
complications.
The poignancy of life's large and small complications -
the worries - resonates because the talk lingers in the mind after the
film has ended. Superbly edited into a compelling narrative, it's a
short, heady experience to watch.
It draws an epiphany out of the
ordinary.
John
Doyle
The
Globe and Mail
"It's just about two Jewish
girls sitting around kvetching". That's how 34-year-old
Montrealer Sharon Hyman describes her "feel bad movie of the year,"
Worried. It's a short film that explores the hopes and, mostly the
fears of Hyman and her best pal, Naomi Levine.
The production is low tech, to be sure. But it is funny - and
very off-the-wall.
Eric
Kohanik,
TV Times Magazine
The entire cast of
thirtysomething has nothing on Naomi Levine and Sharon
Hyman, the creative team behind Worried. When the two filmmakers
reached 32, they realized they were halfway to retirement and decided
to take stock of their lives on camera. ...
The documentary is a
surprisingly funny, in-depth look at life.
Catherine
Dawson
TV Guide Magazine
|