A Stormy Night Backdrop Blur
A Stormy Night Poster
6.2 1h 16m

A Stormy Night

When a heavy storm threatens the city of New York, two complete strangers –a cynical documentary filmmaker from Spain and an idealist app programmer– find themselves sharing shelter, questioning each other’s understanding of life, happiness and love.

Top Cast

  • Jacob Perkins

    Jacob Perkins

    Alan

  • David Moragas

    David Moragas

    Marcos

  • Jordan Geiger

    Jordan Geiger

    Tristan

  • Marc DiFrancesco

    Marc DiFrancesco

    Sergi

  • Elena Martín Gimeno

    Elena Martín Gimeno

    Clara

  • Nick Neon

    Nick Neon

    Airport passenger

  • Moxie Peng

    Moxie Peng

    Wetopia users

  • Jorge Sistos

    Jorge Sistos

    Wetopia users

  • Molly Gillis

    Molly Gillis

    Airport Announcement

Overview

When a heavy storm threatens the city of New York, two complete strangers –a cynical documentary filmmaker from Spain and an idealist app programmer– find themselves sharing shelter, questioning each other’s understanding of life, happiness and love.

Rating

6.2 / 10
11 Reviews
0 Popular

1 Reviews

  • CinemaSerf
    CinemaSerf
    6 Dec 3, 2022

    A threatening storm is playing havoc with flights from New York and causes "Marcos" (David Moragas) to seek shelter at his friend's apartment. She has gone alway to avoid the weather, but her friend "Alan" (Jacob Perkins) is there and the remainder of this film depicts the twenty-four hours (or so) as these two gay men learn a little about each other. It is quite intimately filmed, this - but the whole story is contrived and over-scripted. Perkins brings an intensity to his performance, but the underlying themes of love, happiness, frustration etc... are depressingly familiar. Despite the odd quip and some fairly predictable attempts at humour, this really just comes across as a rather unfulfilling story that left me indifferent to both characters and rather bored with a will they/won't they dynamic that really fails to get off the ground - and never looks like it should either. The audio of the thunder and lightening around them, along with some frequently rather dingy lighting, does lend a little to the atmosphere of the scenario, but in the end Perkins just has way, way too many lines to deliver and, well, eighty minutes seemed to take much longer.

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