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The strange year of 2020 has brought many disappointments, including the closing of theatres and the delay of many of the most anticipated films of the year. As a result, cinephiles and casual movie-goers alike have had to curb their expectations for upcoming movies and try to enjoy what they could from the comfort of their own home. However, this doesn’t mean that there weren’t new movies available, and many of the films that did come out were hardly a disappointment.
With the biggest wide releases postponed to 2021, there was a lot more room for directorial debuts to gain exposure and recognition through on-demand releases and streaming services. Not only that, but these emerging voices often felt like the most impressive and unique compared to the 2020 films that had established filmmakers and higher budgets. With that in mind, the following list details ten of these great directorial debuts that came out in 2020. For the purpose of this list, all the debuts will be narrative
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by Graham RicksonTuesday, 26 January 2021 Sorry I wasn t here more. Emily Mortimer and Robyn Nevin in Relic
Relic s deliberate drabness hits home first; set in Victoria, Natalie Erika James’s modern horror shows us a grey contemporary Australia, a place bleached of all colour.
Relic s deliberate drabness hits home first; set in Victoria, Natalie Erika James’s modern horror shows us a grey contemporary Australia, a place bleached of all colour. We first see Kay and her daughter Sam (Emily Mortimer and Bella Heathcote,
pictured below) driving through a wooded landscape in search of Kay’s octogenarian mother Edna (Robyn Nevin), reported as missing from the family home. James s debut highlights how fraught intergenerational relationships can be, and Kay’s indifference to Edna is made clear when she’s quizzed by the local police about when she last checked in with her mother, struggling to recall when the pair last spoke.
Blu-ray: Relic theartsdesk.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from theartsdesk.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.