When the past calls, do you pick up the phone?
When old bandmate Joe appears in Berlin after their lead singer Viv's death, Kell joins him on an emotional road trip to honor her final wish at the mystical banks of the Rhein.
Audience Award for Best Feature Film - International Road Movie Festival - Pilsen, Czechia
Audience Choice - Best Narrative Feature - Pillusion Film Festival, Austria
Official Selection, 60th Solothurner Filmtage Switzerland
Best Feature Film Award - SoundScreen Film Festival, Ravenna Italy
JURY: “Some bonds don't break, band members may split up, ignore each other for years, meet again, but the shared experience will remain forever. The on-the-road Biscuit Tin Blues is a polished act of gratitude to the magic of sharing a stage and tuning in to the artistry of each individual member of a musical lineup, all the way to the end of the journey.”
Comedy-Drama / Road movie 97min English / German 4k Telecine Super 8 Colour Ratio 2,39:1 / Surround 5.1
Cast:
Martin Engler, Michael Ferguson, Rabea Lüthi, Luka Omoto, Jack Rath, Britta Steffenhagen, Rénee Johanna Stulz & Milton Welsh
Writter and Director
Jack Rath
Original Music Composer
Rachel Holmshaw
Director of Photography
Kai Rostásy. BVK
Editor Hagen Hinkelmann. BFS
Location Sound Eric Schefter
Sound Editor & Mix Urs Hauck
Costume Design Regina Gyr
Associate Producers Roman Avianus,
Kathrin Heuser
Producers Regina Gyr, Hagen Hinkelmann & Jack Rath
The once passionate Australian musician, Kell lives in Berlin with his partner Amelie. Facing the demise of his music studio and fretting about a large mole that’s appeared on his thigh, life takes an unexpected turn when old friend and ex-bandmate, Joe – a chameleon of sorts, turns up out of the blue. Joe presses Kell to join him in honouring the death of Viv, their former lead singer, who requested that her remains be put to rest at the ‘Lorelei’ – a legendary, mystical rock near her home town on the banks of the Rhein. Encouraged by Amelie to let go a little, Kell takes off with Joe on an autumnal road trip through the provinces of Germany. As the two bond again, past tensions arise. Kell suspects that Joe’s moody behaviour isn’t only grief, but perhaps his general mental wellbeing – he’s reluctant to broach the subject. The two visit the band’s drummer Helmut, in the hope he’ll join the reunion of sorts. This proves disastrous. After dinner with Helmut’s dysfunctional family, Kell cuts into Helmut’s egotism, which sends him and Joe fleeing back to the road. The search for closure and acceptance intensifies as Kell discovers that when in Joe’s company, nothing is ever what it seems, because perhaps it never was…