If you are having issues logging in please click here and then try again.
Lost your password?
Note only works for customers, vendors please contact us.
Close Panel
  • Your Picks
  • DVD & Blu-ray
  • CD
  • Vinyl
  • Collectibles
  • Best Sellers
  • Street date:
 

Product Details

  • An MVD Exclusive
  • SKU: UN01062
  • Format: DVD
  • UPC: 760137662792
  • Street Date: 12/16/14
  • PreBook Date: 11/11/14
  • Label: Unearthed Films »
  • Genre: Drama
  • Run Time: 91:00 mins
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Audio: STEREO
  • Year of Production: 2009
  • Region Code: 0
  • Box Lot: 30
  • Territory: NORTH AMERICA
  • Language: English

 

Cast & Crew

  • Actors:
  •       Darcy Miller
  •       Marc D. Donovan
  •       Albie Selznick
  •       Peter Ganim
  •       Pamela Stewart
  • Director: Matthew Garrett
  • Producer: Thomas R. Rondinella
  • Producer: Matthew Garrett
  • Producer: Adam Schoon
  • Producers: Thomas R. Rondinella
  • Producers: Matthew Garrett
  • Producers: Adam Schoon

 

Product Assets

 

 

Bookmark and Share

 

 

Morris County

A trilogy of thematically connected stories as gruesome as they are tragic and heartfelt.

Image not available
  • List Price: $21.95  
  • Your Price: $21.95
  • In Stock: [{"available":"0"}]
  • You must login to place orders.


    Not purchasing for a business? See our consumer site.


Award-winning writer/director Matthew Garrett (Beating Hearts) presents a trilogy of thematically connected stories as gruesome as they are tragic and heartfelt. In a performance praised by both Fangoria and Rue Morgue, Darcy Miller is Ellie, a damaged teenage girl harboring a terrible secret. Through the course of one traumatic day we learn what led this innocent girl down a path of self-destruction from which there is no return. In The Family Rubin, an upper middle-class Jewish family struggles to keep up appearances as their seemingly perfect life begins to crack at the seams. Albie Selznick (Ricochet, The Young & The Restless) leads an ensemble cast in this shocking and heartbreaking take on the destruction of the modern American family. Elderly Iris is laid off in Elmer & Iris, forcing her to join her curmudgeonly husband in early retirement. When Elmer suddenly dies, Iris decides to keep his decaying body around out of fear of living - and dying - alone. Pamela Stewart (Hal Hartley's Trust and Amateur), Erik Fransden (The Colbert Report), and newcomer Alice Cannon star in this melancholy meditation on loss and the inescapable prison of old age. "Bolstered by grotesque FX from Brian Spears & Pete Gerner (I Sell The Dead, Stakeland, The Innkeepers), and a diverse score by electronic musician David Kristian (Karim Hussein's La Belle Bete and Douglas Buck's Prologue and Sisters), Morris County exposes suburbia's dark heart and the self-destructive compulsions that fester within." - Kier-La Janisse, author of House of Psychotic Women.

Media

Watch trailer »

Bonus Materials

  • Commentary 1- Late-night, beer-infused commentary with Writer/Director Matthew Garrett & Kier-La Janisse, author of House Of Psychotic Women.
  • Commentary 2- Commentary with Writer/Director Matthew Garrett, Producer Thomas Rondinella, Associate Producer Adam Schoon, and Co-Editor Arin Sang-urai
  • Ellie Revisited: A conversation with actress Darcy Miller. (TRT 9 minutes)
  • Beating Hearts -Matthew Garrett's award-winning, critically-lauded dramatic horror short. (TRT 11 minutes)
  • Beating Hearts Commentary- Commentary with Writer/Director Matthew Garrett, Producer Thomas Rondinella, Associate Producer Adam Schoon, and Editor Arin Sang-urai
  • Beating Hearts Revisited: A conversation with actresses Gianna & Georgeanne Bruzzese (TRT 9 minutes)

Sales Points

  • Honorable Mention: Best Feature - 2009 Boston Underground Film Festival

Press Quotes

This is a powerful, soul-crushing film that redefines the definition of horror.

     —The Gore-Met, Rue Morgue

Morris County exposes suburbia's dark heart and the self-destructive compulsions that fester within.

     —Kier-La Janisse, author of House Of Psychotic Women

Like a Haneke film, when the end credits roll, you're left feeling like a little part of you has just died.

     —Dave Jackson, Mondo Exploito

A deeply unsettling film and well worth seeking out.

     —Greg Christie, Twitch

  

This page was created in 0.12838506698608 seconds