The result, at least in the two-and-a-half minute trailer, is a dizzying mélange of rough men, rougher sea and – was that a shark? I wouldn’t be at all surprised. This time, they brought dozens of cameras on a commercial fishing boat, and then let the equipment be tossed from film crew to boat crew, and even into the nets with the catch. Their last collaboration was a far more tame and typical documentary, 2009’s Sweetgrass, about the last long-distance sheep drive in America. The film was made by Lucien Castaing-Taylor and Verena Paravel. There’s even a shower scene, as a hairy sailor tries to scrub away the smell you can almost sense wafting off the screen. Blood (fish blood at least I hope so) spills from a pipe on the side of the ship. Fishermen stare at the lens, equally doleful and only slightly livelier. Dark Woods Film Series Trailer - YouTube The trailer to the film series 'Dark Woods Film' The trailer to the film series 'Dark Woods Film' AboutPressCopyrightContact. Fish guts and fish heads are thrust at the camera. The camera shoots through waves at a huge flock of ravenous sea birds, like something out of a Hitchcock movie. You almost expect it to continue: “One of them never returned.” Instead, we cut to a series of visceral images designed to tug at our collective memory of horror films. “More than 500 ships sail from its harbor every month, often spending weeks at sea.” “Once the whaling capital of the world, today New Bedford is the country’s largest fishing port,” it says. The trailer opens with a cacophony of waves and wind, and one of those white-on-black title cards favoured by found-footage films. Junto a su marido, deciden que necesitan huir de todo para tratar la enfermedad.
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