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Description
Winner of the Maysles Brothers Award for Best Documentary at the
Denver Film Fest, Grand Jury-Prize Winner for Best Documentary at the
Florida Film Festival, Best Documentary at the Hollywood Film Festival,
and Best International Documentary at DocNZ.
One of the strangest, most deadpan, most intricately constructed docs at
this year's festival…A satiric study of rural American values wrapped
in an attempted murder mystery. Funny and chilling, beautifully shot,
cunningly edited, and eye-opening on every level --Roger Moore, Orlando
Sentinel
A mystery, a comedy, a deft character study and, ultimately, a bracing
critique of how development is contributing to the disappearance of the
family farm. --Jurors for The Maysles Brothers Award, Denver FF, AJ
Schnack (filmmaker), Brian Brooks (IndieWire) and David Wilson
(True/False Film Festival).
A stranger-than-truth tale both amusing and appalling… --Dennis Harvey, Variety
A rural Rashomon. Amazing… mesmerizing… one of the best documentaries on
closed off communities and human politics ever mounted. --Bill Gibron,
DVD Talk
Relentlessly surprising. Hilarious. Plays like a rural film noir directed by Errol Morris . --Chris Gray, The Phoenix
Audience members' jaws may be agape all through this strange-but-true story. --Craig Lindsey, Raleigh News & Observer
If you travel through Maine and leave behind the familiar coast of summer
vacations, you find yourself in a different Maine, the Maine of fields, farms,
work and dirt. It’s a place most tourists never see— as the locals say, the real
Maine.
This is where Josh Osborne was raised, on his family’s third-generation dairy
farm in Farmington, with his mother, father, and two sisters. Pulled out of
school in the sixth grade, Josh would get lost on the five-mile trip to town and
faced a life of hard labor. As an uncle says: Once your ass hits the tractor
seat, those days are just as long as a full-grown man's. He worked on the
farm every day for a dozen years on the promise that it would someday be his.
But things didn’t turn out that way. Which is why on a beautiful summer’s day,
this 22-year-old farm boy found himself aiming a rifle at his mother.
Drawing from verite footage, home movies, interviews, police tapes, crime
scene videos, love letters, and re-creations, Knee Deep asks the question: Why
would a son try to kill his mother?
The answers are surprisingly tragic and comic.
THE DVD IS A LIMITED LICENSE WHICH PROHIBITS ANY BROADCASTS,
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CHARGES, RENTAL FEES, AND CIRCULATION TO NON-REGISTERED STUDENTS AND/OR
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CONSTITUTES AN AGREEMENT TO THESE TERMS. PLEASE INQUIRE ABOUT OTHER
LICENSES AND PUBLIC PERFORMANCE RIGHTS. WE WILL TRY TO ACCOMMODATE YOUR
SPECIFIC NEEDS.
Cast
Josh Osborne, Donna Enman, Andrew Robinson, Jeffrey Jackson
Festivals
Winner of the Maysles Brothers Award for Best Documentary at the
Denver Film Fest, Grand Jury-Prize Winner for Best Documentary at the
Florida Film Festival, Best Documentary at the Hollywood Film Festival,
and Best International Documentary at DocNZ.
Full Frame, Hot Springs, Denver, Hollywood, DocNZ, DocFest NY, Florida, Maine, Camden, WoodsHole
Production Credits & Notes
Produced by Michael Chandler & Sheila Canavan
Written & Directed by Michael Chandler
Music by Blake Leyh
A Moenkopi Group/Ingonish Films Production
USA Color 81 min.
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