Black Bridge

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Black Bridge
Directed byKevin Doherty
Written byKevin Doherty
Produced byKevin Doherty
CinematographyKevin Doherty
Brett Howe
Music byGoathorn
Betrayer
Distributed byWinnipeg Film Group[1]
Release date
  • July 14, 2006 (2006-07-14)
Running time
108 minutes
CountryCanada
LanguageEnglish
Budget$6000 CDN

Black Bridge is an independent 2006 comedy-drama film from Canada and was written and directed by Kevin Doherty. It was shot (and re-shot) over the course of 2002 and 2003 with practically no budget. The film is a period piece that takes place in May 1984 Canada during the height of heavy metal music popularity. The film's soundtrack featured music by Winnipeg metal acts Lawsuit and Labyrinth along with Canadian metal acts Goat Horn, Betrayer, Kick Axe, Thor, Anvil, Helix, Brighton Rock, Trained Bears and the American group Geronimo!

Cast[edit]

  • Adam Smoluk as Adrian Downing
  • Raimey Gallant as Kathy Osbourne
  • Jason Malloy as Clive DuBrow
  • Mike Silver as Eddie Elliot
  • Jennifer Pudavick as Tracey Roth
  • James Clayton as Brian 'Gomer' Young (as Clayton Champagne)
  • Orlando Carriera as Sammy Rhoades
  • Natasha Reske-Naurocki as Lisa
  • David Stuart Evans as Mr. Simmons
  • Spencer Maybee as Vinny Gay
  • Mike Cunningham as Bruce 'Pug' Pugnowski
  • Zenon Hudyma as Blackie
  • Kierin Kocourek as Mikey Gay
  • Kelly Wolfman as Patricia Butler
  • Alan MacKenzie as Neil Ward

Reception[edit]

Canuxploitation was generally positive in their review of Black Bridge, writing "Though a few false acting notes are hit, Black Bridge still manages to weave several naturally unfolding stories into a decisively emotional narrative, even working in some very funny flashes of dark humor. A worthy effort deserving of a goat-horn salute or two."[2] The Winnipeg Free Press was mixed in their review, stating "I can't really give Black Bridge a big thumbs-up, but I can throw it a few devil-horns for the crazed fervour with which it descends into high school headbanging culture, circa 1984."[3]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "BLACK BRIDGE". Winnipeg Film Group. Retrieved 4 May 2015.
  2. ^ "Eager Beavers: Canuxploitation Indie Film Spotlight". Canuxploitation. Retrieved 4 May 2015.
  3. ^ "Muddled movie gets metal-head details right". Winnipeg Free Press. Retrieved 4 May 2015.

External links[edit]