
1939, somewhere in the American Midwest: to combat former child-prodigy writer Barbara Fowler's (Hannah Gross) debilitating agoraphobia, she and her pulp-fiction scribe husband, Richard (Peter Vack), move to the countryside where they become entwined in a love triangle with their deeply religious maid (Deragh Campbell) in this trance-like examination of a world destined for extinction. An Evening Song (for three voices) is the second feature by acclaimed producer (The Cathedral, 2021; The Feeling That the Time for Doing Something Has Passed, 2023) and director Graham Swon, previously featured at Acropolis with The World Is Full of Secrets (2018).
TRT: 86 min
In person: Graham Swon
"A heady cinematic concoction likely to strike as sui generis." —Keva York, Reverse Shot
"As visually robust as it is dramatically intimate." —Natalie Keogan, Filmmaker Magazine
"Stunning... a dense and stimulating film that showcases the same ingenuity as the work [Swon] had produced." —Joshua Bogatin, Screen Slate
"An ambitiously innovative meditation on memory and desire... Very rarely do you come across a hypnotic, dreamlike cinematic experience like An Evening Song (for three voices)." —M.J. O'Toole, —Hammer to Nail
"A fairly radical experiment in narrative storytelling which is more easily compared to early 20th-century modernist novels — especially Virginia Woolf’s experiments in multi-voice stream of consciousness." —Alex Fields, InReviewOnline
(Available to download after screening date)