After the Denim (2010) Poster

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8/10
Poignant film short
lowbudg2 December 2010
After the Denim is a wonderful short that should resonate with any generation that had to deal with a generation gap. The acting is superb and subtle. I personally am not overly familiar with Raymond Carver's work, but the script allowed me to understand and sympathize with the old man of this piece.

The story deals with a retired man who is set in his ways. When he and his wife encounter young strangers at their weekly bingo game, it serves as the catalyst for him to be either compassionate or judgmental. The situations set up in the film give him the opportunity to be both.

This is a classy adaptation from writer/director Gregory Goyins, and co-director Scott Rosenfelt. Tom Bower and Karen Landry share a perfect chemistry as the older couple. And Jeff Newburg and Ceren Alkac play the young couple with a reckless abandon that reflects a perfect opposition to the older couple's settled ways.

Bottom line, I really enjoyed this film.
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8/10
A Raymond Carver story reprised with visual richness
sklenicka-carol26 November 2010
"After the Denim" translates Raymond Carver's short story of the same title to film with an admirable appreciation of Carver's small-town characters. The art direction is exquisite -- the apartment, the clothes, the close-ups, especially having Edith wear a girlish hair style (graying) and James in conservative clothes.

At the same time, the film goes beyond merely translating Carver's story; it brings in some resonances from Carver's longer (original, unedited by Gordon Lish) version of the story called "If It Please You" and updates the "hippies" of Carver's day to Gen X (or Y?) kids who drive an old Cadillac and look at James Packer with insouciance his obsessive, suspicious behavior deserves.

Read the stories in the Library of America edition, then see the film.
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8/10
"After the Denim" is Brilliant
connorpec-0-77512318 June 2011
Warning: Spoilers
"After the Denim" is an excellent short, co-directed by Gregory Goyins. It tells the story of an elderly couple who struggle with the hardships of aging, addiction, and accepting younger generations. After arriving late to his weekly bingo game, James Packer becomes distraught over a young couple sitting in his usual seat. James expresses his frustration to his wife, Edith, and soon suspects that the couple (which he humorously refers to as "hippies") is cheating. Through out the scene, after every minor conflict James encounters, he repeatedly states "I don't feel lucky tonight" and goes on with the routine. Goyins masters the art of creating a relationship between the characters and the audience. We see similarities in ourselves from the minor annoyances that James Packer experiences. This is the first effort from Gregory Goyins, I am looking forward to a follow up and eventually a full length title.
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10/10
A Powerful Examination of Time, Perception and Loss
DisinterestedWisdom20 December 2010
After The Denim, based on the short story by Raymond Carver, a new film co-directed and adapted for the screen by Gregory Goyins marks the screenwriter's directorial debut. Impressive from start to finish, After The Denim suggests the start of a very promising new film-making career in the works.

Ill at ease, James Packer finds his normal state of discomfiture further aroused when, arriving late for bingo, he and his wife's seats are occupied by a young couple, one that may or may not have been themselves decades earlier. James' bitterness is apparent immediately upon seeing them. This sets up a dramatic standoff, which is carried out with brilliance, as James confronts them for what he perceives to be cheating. The pettiness of the (imagined) offense is exponentially magnified in James' uneasy world, where the loss of his own son (years earlier), and the imminence of his own decline factor strongly in the dark prism of his imagination.

Goyins takes a big risk here. As James and Edith Packer approach the bingo hall, I found myself asking, where can this go? And indeed, without the strength of impeccable direction and timing, the bingo-hall showdown could have foundered in a mire of banality. Casting, acting and film editing all factor to magnify the intensity of the moment, lending a sinister aspect to an otherwise ordinary young man and his date. The encounter between Packer and the young couple, wholly successful, takes us deeper into James Packers' fragile psyche.

As the Packers approach the bingo hall, James declares, 'I don't feel lucky tonight'. These words, finally, will be prophetic when, upon returning home, the specter of imminent tragedy is unveiled. James Packers' imagination races back to the youth and freedom of the couple at the bingo hall; his bitterness now displaced on them. If only...

After the Denim is a study on loss, age and the toxic effects of envy. Still, James Packer arouses our sympathy in spite of his failings, and in this there is much to be admired - and in doing so locates the part of elder agoniste appropriately into a length panoply of such characters - who's struggle is to remain meaningful in an age where one's relevance is marginal at best. We are reminded of Laertes, Odysseus' father, who, awaiting his sons' return from foreign adventure erodes the slow erosion of self that accompanies the loss of his son. There would be no harvest of vigor in the person of his child.

A short film, with finely tuned performances distills with maximum economy the breadth of the characters' experience, delivering completely on the strength of Carver's short story.
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10/10
A truly moving film about patience, struggle, courage and an unstoppable, unyielding love.
whisperinwillowz23 June 2011
It was a wonderful touching film. It left me wanting more. I love Tom Bower and have always been a fan of his. He was true to form as always. I wanted to just reach through the screen and put my arms around both of them as they handle they're individual struggles that strengthen their love for each other so intensely. They had a love and understanding for each other that can only grow with time and patience that we all long to have and they shared it with us beautifully. The chemistry between Tom Bower and Karen Landry was brilliant. Their characters had a complete acceptance of each other and expressed an unyielding love for one another in the everyday simplicities of just being them. My heart broke being left wondering if she will be OK, knowing the possible outcome. And it screamed Bravo! when he tossed the booze down the drain using every ounce of strength he could muster to simply walk to the sink. I loved Tom's monologue to the young ones in the world who have no real idea what life is truly about just yet. And I loved the strength and grace of Karen's character as she worried more about her husband than herself and put her own fears aside to be able to give him assurance, though we know both of them are terrified of the pending bad news. As the film ends you're left with a feeling of affection for both of them, as if they are family you are genuinely concerned about and wanting to be there for. Wonderful! Powerful! Want more!
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10/10
Poignancy of growing old
cskgreen1 February 2011
"After The Denim" is a beautiful film drawing us into the lives of an aging couple, James and Edith Packer, beautifully portrayed by Tom Bower, and Karen Landry. Raymond Carver's work prodigiously adapted by Gregory Goyins, writer and directorial debut, makes us feel the character, James Packers' conflict. Looking back at one's life and asking the poignant question, when did I grow old? Was my life meaningful? Did I love well? We feel the choices he faces, feeling his bitterness and pain, or numbing them with alcohol. I loved the young couple at the Bingo hall portrayed by Jeff Newburg and Ceren Alkac; they WERE the Packer's when they were that age. This film juxtaposes young and old, and the inevitability of aging that we all must face. In an age where film making is about multimillion budgets and special effects, this film tells a real story that we all can relate to, real life, and shows us that great film making does not require big bucks for a great story to be told. Beautifully acted, directed, and shot. A must see.
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10/10
Excellent short film
gittle122628 June 2011
Warning: Spoilers
I never never read any Raymond Carver writings, but after seeing After the Denim, I'm going to seek him out.

It's hard to believe that this is the screen writer and directors first film making endeavor, it was so professionally done. The acting was superb.

I related so much to Jim, his annoyance at the young people who were in his spot at Bingo, us elderly tend to be very territorial. The emotions that were brought to the surface were so well done in a 27 minute film, you felt like you were watching a full length feature. I was also taken back with his emotions for his wife and the surprising twist of him being the needle pointer. The more I think about the movie the more I enjoyed it. It gave me pause to think!
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10/10
AFTER After the Denim
mattleer17 June 2011
AFTER I watched this film I sat around for maybe half hour. I wasn't really doing any mental gymnastics, more of just basking in the glow of a damn good piece of short cinema. I cannot recommend this film enough. Tom Bower absolutely kills it in this film. So happy to see him take the lead and deliver such a mammoth of a performance. As a Carver fan, I can say this piece handles the troubled author with enough respect and clarity that the themes from the short story are conveyed perfectly. The filmmakers obviously had love for Carver as well as almost each scene is retained with perfect delivery. And where else can you get a poignant drama about Bingo, the most sinister boardgame of them all. Where I ask you!?

Seek out this film. Well worth it for Carver and film lovers alike.
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10/10
Congratulations!
MRung29 June 2011
Warning: Spoilers
The depth and excellence of acting and directing in this film was most evident. The film was riveting, and enveloped the viewer with a range of emotions. One could feel the emptiness, the banality, the resentment of age, the jealousy of youth, the trappings of addiction, the fear of loneliness, the loss of gratitude, the inability to cultivate the daily minor ecstasies that this life can offer, the concentration on what was lost as opposed to what was still left....the total void that life separated from God can cause, and yet, still see hope in the love between the lead couple.

Yes....ALL THIS in just 27 minutes. An impactive story, and wonderful acting/directing. WOW!!!!
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8/10
An effective and affecting translation of Carver
natebell16 March 2012
After the Denim is a faithful rendering of a Raymond Carver short story about a man coming to grips with his wife's terminal illness, compressed (like Joyce's The Dead) into a single evening. Adaptations of this sort can be tricky, especially since they rely so much on subtext, but this one successfully navigates the small epiphanies without spilling over into sentiment. The nuance is there in the finely tailored performances and humdrum trappings. The filmmakers get great mileage from simple locations: a bland bingo hall is turned into a dramatic space; an ordinary parking lot becomes confrontational. An auspicious performance from first-time writer-director Goyins and longtime producer-director Rosenfelt.
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