Warning: The following post discusses a DVDSCR (screener) copy of Sailing Home . Quality and final cut may vary from the theatrical release.
Every so often, a little film slips its moorings and drifts into the awards conversation almost unnoticed. , the latest indie drama from director Elena Voss, is exactly that kind of sleeper hit. And while the only way many of us have seen it so far is via the ubiquitous DVDSCR copies circulating online, it’s already generating the kind of whisper-quiet hype that leads to distribution deals and surprise nominations. What is Sailing Home About? If you’ve only seen the 30-second trailer, you know the basics: After a family tragedy, a retired oceanographer (played by a heartbreaking Mark Renton) refits his old sloop and decides to sail the Atlantic alone. He brings along his estranged granddaughter (newcomer Sasha Lin), who would rather be at summer school than learning how to tie figure-eight knots. sailing home dvdscr
Cinematographer Priya Khanna (working on a micro-budget) makes the most of real open-water shooting. Even in a grainy DVDSCR, the shots of bioluminescence in the wake or a blood-red sunset over the Azores are stunning. Sailing Home is a triumph of atmosphere over budget, and character over CGI. The screener gives you about 85% of the intended experience. You’ll understand the plot, you’ll feel the tension, and you’ll definitely argue about the ambiguous ending. Warning: The following post discusses a DVDSCR (screener)
Don’t judge the film’s sound editing or final color timing based on this leak. And please, if you enjoy it, track down the official release when it drops. Independent films like this survive on actual ticket sales and rentals, not screener downloads. , the latest indie drama from director Elena
Sailing Home is expected to hit streaming platforms in late Q3. Until then, the DVDSCR will have to do for the impatient. Just don’t tell the Academy.
★★★★☆ (4/5) Rating (for the DVDSCR quality): ★★☆☆☆ (2/5)