Split Costs
Split Costs | |
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Amazon Video | |
Release date |
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Running time | 20 minutes[2] |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Split Costs is a 2016 dramatic short film, written and directed by Jeffrey B. Palmer. The film premiered at the 2016 Bluestocking Film Festival in Portland, Maine, where it received an Audience Choice Award.[3] Since then, the film has received 15 awards, and has 14 nominations.
Cast
- Mela Hudson as Emma
- Tori Hall as Judy
- Jane Harte as Brenda
- Lauren Kirby as Helen
Plot
The story begins in
They sit down at a Panera Bread, and Emma tries to call her mother, but there is no answer. As they finish their meals and head back to the car, Judy offers to look under the hood to see what is causing it to overheat. She explains that the car needs oil and coolant, and offers to chip in for this as payment for the ride. As Judy walks off, Emma tries her mother again, but there is still no answer.
As they continue driving towards their destinations, now with heat in the car, they celebrate and Emma expresses her gratitude. Their relationship improves and they become closer to each other. But as Emma arrives in front of Helen's apartment, and says goodbye to her new friend, she is overwhelmed with the feeling of loneliness once again.
Judy quietly sneaks through the door and sits down at the dining room table as she listens to her girlfriend sing in the shower. Without warning, another voice can be heard. Judy suddenly realizes that Helen is being unfaithful and Judy decides to exact her revenge on an oversize
Emma arrives at her mother's motel where she takes a swig of an alcoholic beverage, and smokes a cigarette before trying the door. When her mother doesn't answer after a moment of knocking, Emma decides to crawl through the window. Once inside, she finds her mother's cellphone on the nightstand, and then proceeds to rummage through her belongings in hopes of finding money. But an unexpected twist awaits her in the bathroom. As she turns the corner, her mother lies on the floor, a victim of a heroine overdose. Emma crumbles and falls to the floor, sobbing and trying to convince herself that her mother is just unconscious. After a moment of screaming for her mother to wake up, she leaves the motel room. Back in her car, she makes a phone call and sirens can be heard in the distance. Afterwards, Emma joins Judy at a cafe and they console each other.
Moments later they sit by a bridge and discuss throwing Emma's gun into the creek below. She steps up to the railing and throws the gun in the water. Emma rejoins Judy in the car and they decide to drive down south and get "umbrella drinks".
Reception
Richard Propes of The Independent Critic wrote in his review, "Excellent pacing and editing along with emotionally honest, and disciplined performances from both Mela Hudson and Tori Hall."[4]
Laura MacLeod of Movie Critic Next Door said, "Utterly convincing ... a taut drama with dialog that hits all the right notes."[5]
Jacqui Blue of Film Inquiry wrote, "Emma walks into a nightmare and her world is turned upside down. With a strong performance from Hudson, this point in Split Costs actually had me fighting back tears. I felt her pain as if it was mine."[6]
Kirk Fernwood of One Film Fan's review said, "Formidable in its message, convincing in its execution, and deeply human in its raw portrayal of both the strength and frailty of relationships and their impact on our state of being ... another shining example of the much more grounded nature of stories found within independent cinema."[7]
Accolades
Split Costs won Best Drama, Best Overall, and both Hudson and Hall both received
References
- ^ "6th Annual Bluestocking Film Series" (PDF). www.bluestockingfilms.com. July 11, 2016. Retrieved July 11, 2016.
- ^ "Split Costs". Flicker Pictures.com. Retrieved 2016-07-11.
- ^ "The Bluestocking 2016 Audience Has Spoken!". Retrieved 19 July 2016.
- ^ ""'Split Costs' a Thought-Provoking and Involving Short Film"". Archived from the original on 19 May 2011. Retrieved 10 June 2016.
- ^ ""Split Costs"". Retrieved 21 May 2016.
- ^ ""Split Costs: Two Journeys Become One"". Retrieved 30 August 2016.
- ^ ""Short Film Review 'Split Costs'"". Retrieved 7 May 2016.
- ^ "Hudson Valley International Film Festival Awards". IMDb.
- ^ "Best Shorts Winners".
- ^ "Split Costs".
External links
- Split Costs' at IMDb