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Cross Cut

  • 2015
  • 1h 21m
IMDb RATING
5.4/10
10
YOUR RATING
Cross Cut (2015)
The simple task of babysitting a lounge singer's wife turns into a nightmare for Ginger, Sean and Ricky, three unsuspecting film characters that become self-aware of their own existence in a fictional movie. With an eager determination to defy the writer's outrageous ideas, the characters must quickly think of ways to break out of their predestined roles and into a real and unpredictable narrative of their own making. But when the film's director and producer decide to abandon their current cast and complete the project with an alternative approach to the material, Sean, Ricky and Ginger have some plot twists of their own for the powers that be in this surreal, outlandish comedy.
Play trailer2:39
2 Videos
11 Photos
ComedyFantasy

The actors in a movie become self-aware and begin to take charge of their own existence in a surreal reality.The actors in a movie become self-aware and begin to take charge of their own existence in a surreal reality.The actors in a movie become self-aware and begin to take charge of their own existence in a surreal reality.

  • Director
    • Michael Fredianelli
  • Writer
    • Michael Fredianelli
  • Stars
    • Maralynn Adams
    • Jeremy Koerner
    • Michael Fredianelli
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.4/10
    10
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Michael Fredianelli
    • Writer
      • Michael Fredianelli
    • Stars
      • Maralynn Adams
      • Jeremy Koerner
      • Michael Fredianelli
    • 2User reviews
    • 1Critic review
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos2

    Cross Cut
    Full Movie 1:20:16
    Cross Cut
    Cross Cut
    Trailer 2:39
    Cross Cut
    Cross Cut
    Trailer 2:39
    Cross Cut

    Photos10

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    + 7
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    Top cast43

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    Maralynn Adams
    Maralynn Adams
    • Ginger
    Jeremy Koerner
    Jeremy Koerner
    • Ricky…
    Michael Fredianelli
    Michael Fredianelli
    • Sean
    Ray Medved
    Ray Medved
    • Dick Cromwell
    Matt Singer
    • Neil Tuareg
    Shauna Richardson
    Shauna Richardson
    • Lauren Sharp
    Mike Dinsmore
    • Sean (actor)
    Vanessa Leigh
    Vanessa Leigh
    • Ginger (actor)
    Natasha Estrada
    Natasha Estrada
    • Molly Monroe
    Jennifer Lynne
    • Cinnamon
    David F. Klemt
    • Michael Stalwart
    Ryan Keenan
    • Cameraman
    Michael Nosé
    • Sound guy
    Mary Francis Wantland
    • Woo Girl
    Bobby Wantland
    • Cigarette Guy
    Trent Avvenire
    • Wrap Party Victim
    Mila Avvenire
    • Wrap Party Victim
    Scott Cofer
    • Wrap Party Victim
    • Director
      • Michael Fredianelli
    • Writer
      • Michael Fredianelli
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews2

    5.410
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    Featured reviews

    8Pycal

    Chuck Jones Meets THE TWILIGHT ZONE

    Michael Fredianelli returns to comedy with CROSS CUT. In some ways, it's an interesting change of pace for the director because it has a much different sense of humor than we've come to expect from irreverent tour de-farces like THE BIG SLEAZE. It's a witty film that is highly self-referential and brings to mind works like the Ted Post directed TWILIGHT ZONE EPISODE "A World of Difference" and the famous Chuck Jones cartoon DUCK AMUCK. As with those pieces, CROSS CUT is a meta movie with actor characters that are being manipulated by the crew in charge of them. It's a highly suspenseful film and director Fredianelli keeps up the pace with plenty of amusing twists and turns. The cast is a solid ensemble built around Maralynn Adams, Jeremy Koerner, and Fredianelli himself as the leads. All give good turns in their roles, but Adams comes off as most memorable in her first starring role. Female leads are somewhat less common among Fredianelli's oeuvre and Adams nails her character's Marilyn Monroe type routine and demeanor. Other movie highlights include a first act full of gloriously sleazy 70s art direction (easily rivaling much of the aesthetics of Fredianelli's real 70s set film THE BLACKFACE KILLER!), scenic ski lodge locations, and a wonderful appearance by canine star Martini. Somehow Martini seems right at home in front of the camera and is almost disgustingly cute in this. There's also a killer climax full of brutal (and yet still darkly hilarious in tone) wanton gun violence. While the filmmaker characters on screen are humorously slipshod indie types, the movie might have benefited from a Hollywood location or two as did HIERARCHY (yep, another past Fredianelli film!) as it would have given the movie making subject matter a bit more credence. This is a minor gripe however and CROSS CUT plays as a unique piece of indie filmmaking that entertains in spades!
    HughBennie-777

    Fredianelli Delivers!

    Director Michael Fredianelli's loony, abstract comedy *splrrrrches* off the screen and throws enormous caution to the wind. This hopefully liberates the movie from post-modern geeks, yet may alienate fans of Fredianelli's linear dramas about rape and characters who subjugate one another to copious amounts of abuse with no redemption in sight. The director does include one on screen sandwich being made for film professors still seeking academic tenure through Fredianelli's work.

    Some flaws threaten to break the momentum--bad acting, unforgivable and unlicensed repetition of Miles Davis on the soundtrack, and a middle section which suffers from pace and sound issues; likely the result of breathtaking stolen locations, from the frozen tundras of northern California to Vegas. But the movie's last half blossoms with hilarious new faces. There's also a 3rd act plot development which promises (and delivers) laughs and shocking, cathartic violence along the lines of "Exterminator 2". Aaron Stielstra provides the original funk score sopping wet with gurgly beats, bass lines, and squishy melodies commonly associated with sea beasts. Fredianelli, himself, is memorable, tragic, yet hard to watch as a swindled actor--as are Maralynn Adams and Jeremy Koerner. Truly funny moments come from Matt Singer and Shauna Richardson as desperate casting personnel, with Mike Dinsmore and Vanessa Leigh creating gut-wrenching horror as an acting duo who receive undue celebration. Still, it is the presence of the film's canine protagonist Martini who induces the most teardrops. This dog sustains as much on screen cuteness as any 1970s Disney mammal, and erases most unclean devotion to computer animated garbage like Finding Nemo.

    Fredianelli's often clever camera-work supports the movie's cheerful design, while startling climate change lends considerable dramatic impact to the finale and Fredianelli's attack on filmmakers in general. Here, the satire is more pointed and not so tantrum-like. Furthermore, the always welcome doo-doo humor carries symbolism worthy of Tarkovsky and simultaneously packs plenty of lovable grotesque detail in its sound design.

    A delightful, imaginative (and vulgar) romp. In this viewer's opinion, Fredianelli's best comedy since The Minstrel Killer.

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      Followed by Zero to Heaven (2018)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • April 13, 2015 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Filming locations
      • Las Vegas, Nevada, USA
    • Production company
      • Wild Dogs Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 21 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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