*** Welcome to piglix ***

Wah Do Dem

Wah Do Dem
WahDoDem-Poster.jpg
Wah Do Dem film poster
Directed by Ben Chace and Sam Fleischner
Produced by Ben Chace, Sam Fleischner, and Katina Faye Hubbard
Written by Ben Chace and Sam Fleischner
Starring Sam Bones
Distributed by Wah Do Dem LLC
Release date
  • June 20, 2009 (2009-06-20) (Los Angeles Film Festival)
  • June 2010 (2010-06) (United States)
Running time
76 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Wah Do Dem is an American independent film directed by Ben Chace and Sam Fleischner in 2009 and released in 2010.

The major roles are played by Kevin Bewersdorf, Sean "Bones" Sullivan (of Brooklyn band Sam Champion), and Carl Bradshaw, who played Jose in the 1972 film The Harder They Come.

Brooklyn slacker Max wins two tickets for a Caribbean cruise but ends up travelling alone after being dropped by his girlfriend, Willow. The trip coincides with the 2008 US election, which is won by Barack Obama. After docking in Jamaica a series of misfortunes sees him travelling across the country where he meets several characters, including musicians and a mystic Rastaman.

The film was directed and written by Ben Chace and Sam Fleischner, and contains a cameo by Norah Jones and a live performance by The Congos.

Wah Do Dem was made after Chace won two cruise tickets in real life and bought more for Bones and Bewersdorf in order to make the film. He arranged for co-producer Katina Faye Hubbard to meet them in Jamaica, where the film was completed. Filming lasted three weeks in total.

The film features music by MGMT, Yeasayer, Santigold, Suckers, Mykal Rose, Mr. Lexx and The Congos. Ira Wolf Tuton of Yeasayer and Ben Goldwasser of MGMT also appear in the film.

The film has a Metacritic score of 54.The New York Times called it a "shaggy road movie about relinquishing your comforts to find your bliss", while the New York Post described it as "slight but satisfying". Sheri Linden of The Hollywood Reporter described the film as "a misadventure narrative, told via verite-style guerrilla filmmaking", and called it a "dynamic portrait of Jamaica". Slant magazine gave it three stars out of four, calling it "a brief, peripatetic love letter to Jamaican tropes scrawled on hemp stationary [sic]".Total Film gave it three stars out of five, with Kevin Harley describing it as "stylish, observant, fitfully funny and laced with promise". Rob Nelson, reviewing the film for Variety, describe dit as "slight but winning and often funny". Derek Malcolm, writing for the London Evening Standard, viewed the film as "impossible not to like".


...
Wikipedia

...