Exclusive: Documentary follows four women who row the Pacific Ocean.
New York-based The Film Sales Company president Andrew Herwitz [pictured] has launched worldwide sales at Toronto International Film Festival (Sept 8-18) on Sarah Moshman’s documentary Losing Sight Of Shore.
The film, currently in post, chronicles the harrowing journey of four women who rowed across the Pacific Ocean from the Us to Australia to raise awareness for breast cancer. Moshman follows “the Coxless Crew” on their nine-month ordeal as they overcome obstacles and defections. “
Sarah’s extraordinary access make this both a psychological and physical thriller,” said Herwitz. “It is the best kind of extreme sports film – one in which you are amazed by the physicality and drawn in by the emotional power.”...
New York-based The Film Sales Company president Andrew Herwitz [pictured] has launched worldwide sales at Toronto International Film Festival (Sept 8-18) on Sarah Moshman’s documentary Losing Sight Of Shore.
The film, currently in post, chronicles the harrowing journey of four women who rowed across the Pacific Ocean from the Us to Australia to raise awareness for breast cancer. Moshman follows “the Coxless Crew” on their nine-month ordeal as they overcome obstacles and defections. “
Sarah’s extraordinary access make this both a psychological and physical thriller,” said Herwitz. “It is the best kind of extreme sports film – one in which you are amazed by the physicality and drawn in by the emotional power.”...
- 9/9/2016
- by jeremykay67@gmail.com (Jeremy Kay)
- ScreenDaily
Four U.K. women are attempting the impossible. On April 20, 2015, Natalie Cohen, 40, Laura Penhaul, 32, Emma Mitchell, 30, and Meg Dyos, 25, set out from San Francisco, California, in a 29-ft. long, 7-ft. wide pink rowing boat named "Doris," to cross 8,446 miles of unforgiving Pacific water. The women, who call themselves the Coxless Crew after their lack of a coxswain (a person who sits in the stern) member onboard, are on the third and final leg of their journey. When they arrive in Cairns, Australia, in early January, they will have become the first ever team of four to row the Pacific Ocean,...
- 12/24/2015
- by Rose Minutaglio, @RoseMinutaglio
- PEOPLE.com
Four U.K. women are attempting the impossible. On April 20, 2015, Natalie Cohen, 40, Laura Penhaul, 32, Emma Mitchell, 30, and Meg Dyos, 25, set out from San Francisco, California, in a 29-ft. long, 7-ft. wide pink rowing boat named "Doris," to cross 8,446 miles of unforgiving Pacific water. The women, who call themselves the Coxless Crew after their lack of a coxswain (a person who sits in the stern) member onboard, are on the third and final leg of their journey. When they arrive in Cairns, Australia, in early January, they will have become the first ever team of four to row the Pacific Ocean,...
- 12/24/2015
- by Rose Minutaglio, @RoseMinutaglio
- PEOPLE.com
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