LITTLEROCK

LittleRock
Mike Ott, 2019

Catalog No.: FTF-094
Length: 83 minutes

Synopsis
Vacationing Japanese siblings (Atsuko Okatsuka, Rintaro Sawamoto) become stranded in a California desert town but soon warm up to life in the dusty burg.

Directed by Mike Ott
Cinematography by Marshall Coles
Original Music  by Amiina and Deric Fudesco
Featuring: Atsuko Okatsuka, Cory Zacharia, Rintaro Sawamoto, Roberto 'Sanz' Sanchez

Awards: Independent Spirit Awards: Someone To Watch Award, AFI: Best Feature Film (Audience Award), AFI: Audience Award (Young Americans), Gotham Awards: Best Film Not Playing at a Theater Near You

Festivals: San Francisco International Film Festival, Transilvania International Film Festival, Istanbul Film Festival, Vancouver International Film Festival, Seattle International Film Festival, Ghent Film Festival, Melbourne International Film Festival, CPH:PIX, Thessaloniki Film Festival, Hong Kong International Film Festival, Viennale, Torino Film Festival, Tromsø International Film Festival, Warsaw International Film Festival, Reykjavik International Film Festival, Cairo International Film Festival, Raindance Film Festival, Boston Independent Film Festival

WATCH THE FILM

 

PRESS

"Littlerock tells a confident story that knows precisely where it's going."
-Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times 

"There's a melancholy to this indie's cross-cultural explorations and communication breakdowns that compensates for the broader swipes."
David Fear, Time Out 

"An ethereal and ephemeral musing on the art and artifice of communication."
Betsy Sharkey, Los Angeles Times 

“Littlerock isn't a film weighed down by symbolism, and to misconstrue it as such would divert us from its small, idiosyncratic pleasures.”
-Michael Sicinski, Cinema Scope 

“Ott has explored his theme - how each person's destiny is propelled by the past but left dangling, isolated in a seemingly formless present - with great subtlety.”
-Tom Keogh, Seattle Times 

"A neatly plotted, observational film about being on the outside looking in, and on the inside looking out."
-Burl Burlingame, Honolulu Star-Advertiser 

“A restrained but visually arresting film about the various ways in which we reach out to one another, often to no avail.”
-Michael Nordine, Film Threat 

"Ott's distilled the town until it floats somewhere between a hangover and a dream."
-Wesley Morris, Boston Globe

"Expectations are subverted, assumptions exploded, and the meaningless nature of words is replaced by the importance of conversation."
-Andrea Chase, Killer Movie Reviews

"This evocative, deceptively rich slice of life has its own voice, and it never fails to be enjoyable for several reasons."
-David Lewis, San Francisco Chronicle 

"Atsuko the character doesn't speak English; Atsuko the actress, speaking mostly un-subtitled Japanese when she speaks at all, gives a performance that's a marvel of nonverbal reaction."
-Karina Longworth, Village Voice 

Director Mike Ott's second narrative feature cannily plays its intentions close to the vest.
-Bill Weber, Slant Magazine 

"A character-driven cross-cultural drama about the adolescent quest for new experiences and the realization of the mysteries that lie behind relationships and reality."
-Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat, Spirituality & Practice 

"Ott captures with subtlety, wit, and irony the points of view of both the Japanese visitors and the local yokels."
-Peter Keough, Boston Phoenix 

"Littlerock wins your involvement by its meandering off-handedness and refusal to play up its strangers-in-a-strange-land conceit."
-James Adams, Globe and Mail 

"A nicely pitched filmic playlet on how others see us, Littlerock puts Middle America under a microscope and breathes life into the mundane."
-Jim Slotek, Jam! Movies 

"Ott's knack for telling observations and beguiling ambiguities make him a director to watch."
-Jason Anderson, eye WEEKLY