The Greyness of Autumn

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The Greyness of Autumn
File:2015 The Greyness of Autumn.jpg
Directed by Chris Quick
Produced by Chris Quick
Mark D. Ferguson
Andy S. McEwan
Written by Chris Quick
Andy S. McEwan
Starring Duncan Airlie James
Amy E Watson
Steven Patrick
Chris Quick
Neil Francis
Music by Alan Tennie
Cinematography Paul Michael Egan
Edited by Chris Quick
Production
company
Release dates
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  • 28 December 2012 (2012-12-28)
Running time
14 minutes
Country United Kingdom
Language English

The Greyness of Autumn[1] is a short comedy film following the life of Danny McGuire, an ostrich living in Glasgow. The film was produced by Quick Off The Mark Productions and marked the directorial debut for Chris Quick.

Plot

Danny McGuire is an ostrich who works for a call centre selling loft insulation. His life seems to be relatively stable with a decent job and a girlfriend of many years. However, on the first day of autumn, Dannys life is turned upside down when he learns that his job is being outsourced to India. That very same night, his girlfriend tells him that she has met another man and is leaving him. Distraught by the events of the day, Danny turns to his flat mate Nelson (a cornflake eating monkey) at the local pub but their conversation is cut short when a fight breaks about between the pub landlord Barry and Nelson. Danny slips away unnoticed from the bar and heads home to drown his sorrows. Upon his way home, Danny unexpectedly walks into the path of a mugger who holds him at knifepoint demanding his shoes. Despite attempts to inform the mugger that he has no shoes, Danny is knocked out by a punch to the face.

After reflecting on recent events over a bottle of whiskey, Danny soon comes to realise that he can't escape the vicious cycle known as 'The Greyness of Autumn' and realises that society will never except him for being different and that Danny could only be free if he ended his life.

Main Cast

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  • Duncan Airlie James as Danny McGuire (Voice)
  • Amy E Watson as Katie
  • Steven Patrick as Mr Jenkins
  • Chris Quick as Nelson (Voice)
  • Neil Francis as Barry
  • Andrew O'Donnell as Jimmy Guinness
  • Euan Cuthbertson as The Interviewer
  • Dave Cullen-Wills as The Mugger
  • Tom Moriarty as Mr Harrison
  • David R. Montgomery as The Restaurant Manager
  • David Marshall as Kyle
  • Andy S. McEwan as The Office Worker

Release and reception

The film was released on 28 December 2012 and had its first public screening in April 2013 at the Centre for Contemporary Arts in Glasgow where it was shown alongside The Priest with Two Guns by Rodney Reynolds. Both films coincidentally had Duncan Airlie James in the leading role.[2]

Throughout 2013, the film appeared at a number of festivals in the United Kingdom including the Edinburgh Short Film Festival[3] and the Deep Fried Film Festival.[4] Internationally, the film was screened in various countries including the United States where it featured in the Big Little Comedy Festival.[5] It was also shown at the Dublin Short Film & Music Festival in Ireland.[6]

The Greyness of Autumn received highly positive reviews from critics. In the United Kingdom, MovieScramble said: <templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />

"The fact that there are more than a few memorable moments in the film is a testament to the quality of the writing. A very nicely paced, bone dry comedy that is a splendid way to spend fourteen minutes."[7]

The London Film Review[8] and ScreenCritix both gave the film 4 out of 5 stars with Edmond Guy adding: <templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />

"The director did a fantastic job of bringing human elements to a prop. A feat in itself."[9]

Internationally, the film received high praise with Mark Bell of Film Threat in the United States saying: <templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />

"The Greyness of Autumn is an odd duck of a film. On the one hand, it is a bleak, dry, downward spiral for Danny. On the other hand, it’s all that, but it’s happening to an ostrich puppet. Which is what makes this entertaining, honestly, because if it was just another dramatic story about a guy whose life goes to shit, it wouldn’t be that interesting".[10]

Canadian review site Pretty Clever Films wrote: <templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />

"Quick is alarmingly funny. The film serves up a copious amount of black comedy that has a great WTF-factor. The film is intriguing simply because it’s so strange."[11]

In 2014, the film returned to the festival circuit appearing in the Southern Colorado Film Festival[12] and the Portobello Film Festival.[13] In November, the film screened at the Barossa Film Festival in South Australia.[14] In 2015, the film returned to Australia for the People of Passion Festival where it picked up the Best Short Comedy accolade.

Awards

Year Awards Category Recipient(s) Result
2013 British Filmmakers Alliance Best British Film of the Month[15] Chris Quick, Andy S. McEwan, Mark D. Ferguson Won
2015 People of Passion Film Festival Best Short Comedy Film Chris Quick, Andy S. McEwan, Mark D. Ferguson Won

Eurovision

In 2013, the producers of the film considered a bid for the character Nelson to represent the United Kingdom at the 2014 edition of the Eurovision Song Contest. A support page was launched on Facebook[16] but eventually no song materialised and the bid was abandoned.

Autumn Never Dies

On December 12, 2014, it was announced on the website of Quick Off The Mark Productions that writing had begun on a possible sequel to The Greyness of Autumn entitled Autumn Never Dies.[17] A crowd funding campaign was launched on Kickstarter on 17 August 2015 to raise funds for the production and lasted for 30 days.[18] The campaign successfully raised £1,505 from 44 backers including former Gamesmaster host Dominik Diamond.[19] The film is due for release in 2016.

References

External links