Wine for Winter Nights 

It’s officially Winter and almost the countdown to Christmas (eeeek) so here at Frost we decided to toast away what has been a glorious Summer and a mild Autumn with some beaut wine offerings.

For our White Wine lovers we have gone for;

Villa Maria Sauvignon Blanc Private Bin

Villa Maria has long been a hit with consumers and New Zealand Sauvignon Blanc has continued to dazzle customers for a number of years now. As the most widely planted grape variety in NZ, Villa Maria have a few distinct Sauvignon Blanc styles dependent on regions of the country owing to the maritime climate. Here we try the Malborough Private Bin which features grapes picked from a combination of vineyards across two different valleys in Malborough. The result is an intense and herbaceous flavour noticeably distinguishable from Villa Maria Reserve Malborough wine which has grapes specifically from Wairau valley. Private Bin has a strong and fresh flavour alive with citrus and tropical fruits owing to the long sunny days and cooler nights. 

This is a flavoursome wine and can be enjoyed without food but with owing to its strong flavour, a glass with dinner will go down well. We paired it with Chicken and Mushroom risotto. 

Available from most good grocery stores. A full list can be found on their website:

www.villamaria.co.nz 

RRP: £9.69 (Waitrose price)

For a hearty RED recommendation we chose; 

Errazuriz Estate Series Carmenere 2017

This Chilean number is robust and pleasing owing to it being 90% Carmenere. The aromas are evocative of a classic wintery red with hints of black pepper, oak and nutmeg. A perfect fireplace wine. The balance of smoke and spice is the stand out essence which distinguishes this Carmenere variety, and ever so subtly sets it apart from the Merlot. The dash of Petit Syrah which makes up the other 10% adds to the aromatics of the wine.

Smooth tannins make this highly desirable on the palette with and without food and I would certainly recommend with rich dishes sweet and savoury due to the chocolatey nature of this wine. 

RRP: £10.50 

www.majestic.co.uk

Three Errazuriz Wines For The Three P’s – People, Place & Product

Viña Errazuriz, one of Chile’s premier family wine estates, is the proud sponsor of the Wine Photographer of the Year competition – a category within the Pink Lady Food Photographer of the Year competition, which has grown from strength to strength since its inception.

The judging of the Errazuriz Wine Photographer of the Year 2015 has begun, so we have chosen three wines to represent each sub-category of the competition: People, Place and Product.

The winners will be announced at the Mall Galleries, London on Wednesday 6 May 2015

theblendwinereview

People – Errazuriz The Blend White 2011 

RRP £22

Waitrose.com, The Wine Reserve

Errazuriz The Blend White 2011 is a fresh and complex wine. A superior white with aromas of liquorice, almonds, pear and honey. Delicious.

The Blend White 2011 has been chosen for the man behind the wine: chief winemaker, Francisco Baettig.  Each year, Francisco is given free rein to select from the best and most interesting parcels from the Errazuriz vineyards to put together an unconventional blend.  The philosophy behind the wine is to create a wine that is greater than the sum of its parts.  The Blend White is a Rhone inspired wine made up of 55% Roussanne, 30% Marsanne and 15% Viognier.

pinotnoirwinereview

Place – Errazuriz Aconcagua Costa Pinot Noir 2011 

RRP £17.99

Harrods.com, Stone Vine & Sun, Cheers Wine Merchants, The Oxford Wine Company, The Wine Reserve, Wimbledon Wine Cellars

Errazuriz Aconcagua Costa Pinot Noir 2011 is a deep ruby-red colour with subtle notes of red fruits and wild strawberries. This is a wonderful, elegant wine. 

This wine is all about the place or terroir, namely the rolling hills of the Manzanar vineyard just 12km from the Pacific Ocean.  This Pinot Noir benefits from the morning mists and cooling coastal breezes of that site, and vinified with wild yeasts for added complexity, the result is an elegantly fruit dominant wine with great balance and structure.

cabernetsauvignonerruzuriz

Product – Errazuriz Estate Series Cabernet Sauvignon 2013 

RRP £9.99

Waitrose.com, Morrisons.com, Asda.com, Booths, Bargain Booze, buywholefoodsonline.co.uk

Errazuriz Estate Series Cabernet Sauvignon 2013 is an intense and full bodied wine with flavours of soft vanilla and fresh blackcurrant. Aromas of cranberries, cherries, spice and tobacco add to the complexity. Superb. 

This red is the best-selling red wine in the Errazuriz range and therefore very fitting for the Product category.  Chile originally made its reputation with great Cabernet Sauvignon and this wine will show you exactly how good it can be; a full bodied dry red wine with ripe, soft blackcurrant fruit, silky tannins and a long elegant finish.

Pink Lady Food Photographer of the Year, the world’s leading awards recognising the art and diversity of food photography, is open to all, professional and amateur, old and young.

www.pinkladyfoodphotographeroftheyear.com

www.errazuriz.com

 

 

 

 

Thursday Till Sunday Film Review

Thursday-Sunday-editThere would appear to be a growing force behind cinema from Chile in recent years. Pablo Larraín’s  No recently became the first Chilean film to be nominated for foreign language film at the Oscars whereas his previous films Tony Manero and Post-Mortem have joined the likes of Patricio Guzman’s political documentaries (the most recent being the astonishing Nostalgia For The Light) to boost the country’s cinematic reputation of late. Whether or not this is down to a cultural ‘renaissance’ or the ever expanding availability of global cinema is debatable but whatever the reason we should be thankful that such choice is being made available especially in the case of Thursday Till Sunday, an achingly sad yet tender drama from newcomer Domingo Sotomayor that has premiered at various international festivals and picked up the Tiger Award at the Rotterdam Film Festival.

Ana and Fernando (Paola Giannini and Francisco Pérez-Bannen) are taking their two young children Lucia and Manuel (Santi Ahumada and Emiliano Freifeld) on a journey across the country to visit an old lot left by Fernando’s father to him. The long weekend is passed by way of colourful landscapes, locals and naive childrens games and inquisitive questioning of their parents. As the journey goes on, the pre-teen Lucia (and in turn the audience) begin to realise that something is desperately wrong with her parent’s marriage.

 

With a unique, singular directorial style and observations that seem deeply personal yet also universally recognisable, Thursday Till Sunday comes at you like a distant yet powerfully evoked memory. Filmed for the vast majority from inside the moving car and in long static takes, Sotomayor forces us to look longer at everyday events longer than perhaps we are accustomed to (or comfortable with) whether it be a repetitive expression of a child’s boredom or the quiet, awkward and telling silences between mother and father. Rather than alienate however its muted tone makes it easier to focus on the smaller yet dramatic moments that linger in the memory. It’s a relaxing and all too rare  experience to be watching a film that requires you to simply calm down in order to appreciate its pleasures. Keeping the camera firmly within the car for long stretches of the drama certainly creates a feeling of claustrophobia but more so it keeps the action fresh and vibrant, quite a feat given the deliberately slow pace of the proceedings. Whilst focusing on a kids toy being handed back and forth or the constantly shifting landscapes that pass us by, Sotomayor will draw the eye with key actions and conversations taking place in the background, isolated far in the frame or even suggest them offscreen altogether. The film is told directly from the viewpoint of Lucia and the film brilliantly conveys her confusion and anxiety by keeping the family turmoil at a distance. We are never told directly what has contributed to the disintegration of the marriage though we are given hints along the way most notably a detour at a campsite with an old friend of Ana’s of whom Fernando seems suspicious of. Many other filmmakers could have used the pause in the journey as a chance to shed light on the inner turmoil on the marriage but again all the drama is hushed down. An extended shot of Lucia staring out into the night whilst we hear (but don’t see) a potentially crucial plot point says more than most dialogue driven scenes could ever say.

Such a long drawn out journey requires engaging company and thankfully the cast rise to the challenge wonderfully. It’s an advantage to the naturalistic tone of the film that the cast is comprised of unknown faces (both adult leads have extensive CV’s in Chilean television whilst the children are complete newcomers) but these are excellent performances in their own right. Giannini and Pérez-Bannen are given only a minimal setup for the roles of the distanced parents and yet they effortlessly convey the feel of two people who have shared a life together and discovered its shortcomings. You sense the weight of indecision and disappointment on their shoulders and there is thankfully no forced or contrived lapse into melodramatics. The two children are an absolute revelation especially Santi Ahumada as Lucia. Sotomayor kept the exact nature of the story a secret from the two child actors which only serves to make her performance more remarkable. Bright, inquisitive and clearly aware that things are wrong between her mother and father she’s an engaging and delightful conduit into the drama through light and dark moments. A brief scene at the tail end of their journey where Lucia and her father share a quiet moment after all has become clear is so simple in execution yet the naturalness of the performances makes it simply heartbreaking. It is a truly terrific ensemble.

 

It’s not all doom and gloom in Thursday Till Sunday. There are some brilliantly droll observations as Fernando makes little effort to hide his disdain for Ana’s slightly too friendly colleague and the sight of the two children riding atop a vehicle strapped down alongside luggage does raise a smile. But this is a journey toward an inevitable conclusion and as the tone becomes more melancholic and the landscape more sparse and unforgiving the film emerges as a bittersweet account of the end of childhood innocence and the cruel disappointments of adulthood. It’s summed up in one of the more cheerful scenes where Fernando allows Lucia to get briefly behind the wheel giving her a first, almost overwhelming taste of adult responsibility. The evocation of long journeys together and the dawning of awareness that your parents are just people with their own faults is palpable throughout and there’s an honesty to the portrayals that makes the film seem so genuine and naturalistic. Thursday Till Sunday may not be an easy watch for some. It’s aesthetic demands your attention and some may find the subject matter unbearably sad. But to jump to conclusions is unfair; your patience is rewarded with an emotional resonance that lasts long after it ends. It’s certainly one of the best films about childhood I’ve seen in some time and I can’t wait to see what Sotomayor does next.

 

Day for Night launches distribution arm with first two UK theatrical releases

Day for Night is delighted to announce the launch of its distribution arm with its first two theatrical titles HI-SO (Aditya Assarat, Thailand) and THURSDAY TILL SUNDAY(Dominga Sotomayor, Chile).

 

The second film from award-winning Bangkok based Thai-American director Aditya Assarat (Wonderful Town) HI-SO had its world premiere at Busan International Film Festival and European premiere at Berlinale (Forum). HI-SO premieres in the UK on 1 March 2013 at Curzon Renoir. Set against the backdrop of a post-tsunami Thailand, Aditya Assarat’s second film features Thai film star Ananda Everingham in a bittersweet tale of love, memories and belonging. Day for Night is pleased to welcome director Aditya Assarat for a Q&A following the UK premiere as well as for a second screening on 2 March 2013 at Hackney Picturehouse. Both screenings will be followed by receptions sponsored by Chang Beer.

Ananda Everingham in HI-SO (Aditya Assarat, Thailand)

 

Day for night’s second release comes in April 2013 with much talked about Chilean director Dominga Sotomayor‘s debut feature THURSDAY TILL SUNDAY which won the prestigious Tiger Award at International Film Festival Rotterdam 2012 and has since been selected for more than 60 film festivals worldwide, including London Film Festival 2012.

 

 

Day for Night founder Sonali Joshi said:

 

“We’re really excited about this new venture into distribution which has evolved as a natural extension of our film curatorial activities. Our aim is to develop a slate of films that represents some of the freshest and most distinctive titles from around the world – a curated library of films with a particular focus on outstanding up-and-coming filmmakers.

 

“We’re delighted to present Aditya Assarat’s second feature, HI-SO as our first title – a film that is reminiscent of François Truffaut’s classic, DAY FOR NIGHT, hence it seemed a natural choice to launch our distribution activities with this beautifully atmospheric film.”

 

HI-SO is released in the UK on 1 March 2013. THURSDAY TILL SUNDAY is released in the UK on 5 April 2013.

19th Raindance Film Festival Highlights

After Fall, Winter is a sexy love story about a French dominatrix who falls in love with a New York writer in Paris. It is directed by Eric Schaeffer and has the talented Rebecca Jameson in a smaller role. Well worth a watch.

Some of my favourite films that I saw at the Raindance Film Festival were short films.

Death of A Pop Star was an impressive short about A personal physician and the characters in the home of an ailing celebrity. 

Dying Everyday was a wonderful slice of life short from Spain, a short that managed to entertain the audience despite the fact not much happened.

Gin & Dry is a booze heist film set in an old people’s home at Christmas, Oscar Plewes short is funny and entertaining.

Ketchup was a very good film with a tragic ending.

Russell Harbaugh’s Rolling on The Floor Laughing is a high end short film about two grown sons who return home for their widowed mother’s birthday, only to find themselves competing with her new boyfriend for her attention. A well made film that’s worth watching.

Jeremy Craig’s Terrebonne is a visually stunning film. The lead actress is Jessica Heap is a beautiful actress destined to be a movie star.

The Potential Wives of Norman Mao and Exit were also good short films.

I went to the UK Premiere of Bonsai, directed by Cristian Jimenez. The film is from Chile and I thought it was brilliant. Cristian couldn’t be there but filmed an introduction for the film. It tells the story of young writer, Julio, who turns to the romance he had 8 years earlier with the beautiful Emilia when both were studying literature in Valdivia when he gets dropped from writing for a famous author because his asking price is too high. We’re told from the beginning that Emilia dies and Julio remains alone, but don’t let that put you off. It is a wonderful, sensual film. Catch it if you can.

After Bonsai was the closing night gala after party, I bump into Rory O’Donnell and I met some other talented people. I didn’t get home to 2am, can’t wait until next year.