- Source: Hundreds of Beavers
Hundreds of Beavers is a 2022 American slapstick comedy film directed by Mike Cheslik and written by Cheslik and Ryland Brickson Cole Tews. It was inspired by the slapstick comedy of 1920s and 1930s artists. The film stars Tews as an applejack maker in a conflict with beavers, trying to win the hand of a merchant's daughter.
Cheslik and Tews, who previously collaborated on multiple projects, developed the idea for Hundreds of Beavers in October 2018. The film was shot in rural Wisconsin and Michigan across twelve weeks in the winter of 2019 and 2020. Editing and post-production was completed by 2022.
Hundreds of Beavers premiered at Fantastic Fest on September 29, 2022, and has been met with critical praise. The film was self-distributed and received a video on demand release on April 15, 2024.
Plot
Successful 19th century applejack salesman Jean Kayak has his orchard destroyed when a beaver eats one of the support beams of a giant keg, which rolls into his fireplace and explodes. Jean awakens in winter, repeatedly failing to catch food. He finds a group of beavers collecting logs to build a structure and attacks a pair, but is easily beaten by them. He catches fish by making his fingers bleed and using them as lures, and when he sells them to a local merchant, he notices a fur trapper turning an immense profit.
Jean buys a knife with the fish and cuts his shirt into rope. When he realizes the rabbits use a tunnel system, he rigs an exit with the rope and lures them into it, but raccoons eat his catches before he can get to them. He cuts up his pants to hoist the rabbits in the air and out of their reach. Jean catches a raccoon and runs into a Native American, who trades him snowshoes for the knife, and the merchant's daughter skins the raccoon and makes it into clothing for Jean.
Jean breaks his leg when he falls into a pit made by the trapper, who rescues him and takes him on as his protege. Wolves start killing the trapper's dogs, and when the pack attacks in full, the trapper gives Jean his trapping guide before being killed. Jean erases it and starts a new guide as he begins to master the area, finding creative ways to trap the area's animals, selling them to the merchant and trading with the Native for better gear. He and the merchant's daughter develop a mutual attraction, but the merchant demands hundreds of beavers for her hand in marriage. A pair of beavers styled after Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson begin investigating Jean's traps.
Jean realizes the wolves in the area are hoarding the trapper's large collection of beaver carcasses. When the detectives report back to the beavers, who have built a massive dam, they send a large squadron after Jean. He lures them into the wolf cave and seals the entrance with icicles, allowing the wolves to slaughter them. He brings the bodies back to the merchant's cabin, only for it to be a cardboard cutout made by the detectives, who take the bodies to be buried.
Jean sneaks into the dam, but is eventually caught and put on trial for his beaver killing. He is found guilty and set to be skinned and made into a coat, the same thing having happened to the trapper. Jean narrowly escapes his restraints and beats up the group trying to kill him. While trying to escape, he notices the beavers building a rocket ship out of one of his kegs. He accidentally pushes a beaver into it, causing it to malfunction and launch in the wrong direction, breaking the dam and creating the Green Bay with the flood.
Jean rolls the bundle of beaver bodies into a snowball, which he rides as the beavers climb on top of each other to form a giant figure and chase him. The Native latches onto the rocket with a grappling arrow and launches it at the beavers, destroying the figure. The snowball of hundreds of beaver pelts stops at the merchant's cabin, and Jean is allowed to marry the daughter.
Cast
Ryland Brickson Cole Tews as Jean Kayak
Olivia Graves as The Furrier
Wes Tank as The Master Fur Trapper
Doug Mancheski as The Merchant
Luis Rico as The Indian Fur Trapper
Production
Mike Cheslik and Ryland Tews met at Whitefish Bay High School and came to collaborate on film projects. The duo made Lake Michigan Monster, a black-and-white film that cost $7,000, in 2018. The idea for Hundreds of Beavers was created by Cheslik and Tews while at a bar in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in October 2018. Cheslik directed, wrote, edited, and created the visual effects for the film while Tews played the lead role.
Enough money was raised to film the first act, which was shot over the course of three to four weeks. The footage was then showed to other investors which allowed the rest of the film to be shot. The black-and-white film had a budget of $150,000. It was shot over the course of twelve weeks by a six-person crew using a Panasonic GH5, which filmed it in 1080p, in winter in 2019 and 2020. The crew stayed at a cabin in Manitowish Waters. Nine weeks of filming was done in Stephenson, Michigan, and the northern Wisconsin towns of Manitowish Waters, Pembine, and Superior.
The beaver suits were purchased online from a Chinese mascot website, with the teeth being modified by the filmmakers. Over 1,500 visual effects were made using Adobe After Effects. Editing and post-production took two years to complete. Tews' father Wayne composed and performed songs for the film.
Inspiration was drawn from the Mario video games, America's Funniest Home Videos, and the slapstick comedy of Abbott and Costello, Buster Keaton, Charlie Chaplin, and The Three Stooges. Ernst Lubitsch's The Wildcat also inspired the film. Tews based his movements in the film on Jackie Chan. A scene in Seven Chances, in which Keaton is chased by a horde of angry women, is referenced in the film. The second act of the film was designed to be like watching a let's play. Hundreds of Beavers's poster is similar to the poster for It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World.
Release
The film premiered at Fantastic Fest in 2022. Cheslik and the producers chose to distribute the film themselves and Kurt Ravenwood oversaw the promotion campaign. They were aided by Jessica Rosner, a former executive at Kino Lorber. It was shown at fourteen independent theaters in the Great Lakes region, including the Music Box Theatre. The filmmakers rejected distribution offers made after festival showings as those plans would only show the film in theaters in a week before sending it to video on demand. The streaming rights were sold to Cineverse.
It premiered in Canada at the 2023 Fantasia International Film Festival and in the United Kingdom at DukeFest on August 13. The film received a video on demand release on April 15, 2024. It was distributed in Australia, Ireland, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom by Lightbulb Film Distribution on July 9. More than half of the film's box office earnings were made after being released through video on demand.
Reception
On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 97% of 100 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 8.3/10. The website's consensus reads: "Sustaining a zany premise with stylistic bravura and inspired gags, Hundreds of Beavers is a comedic gem that gives a dam." Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 82 out of 100, based on 15 critics, indicating "universal acclaim". It is listed among the top ten of the top fifty films of 2024 on Letterboxd.
Dennis Harvey, writing in Variety, praised the film's editing as it could "milk every gag without belaboring it," the soundtrack was "equal to the visual imagination on display," and that the "ingeniously home-made lark never runs out of steam." Nick Schager, writing in The Daily Beast, declared the film "a marvel of slapstick invention that in terms of pure unbridled creativity puts most big-screen comedies to shame" and "an overstuffed live-action homage to the golden age of animation that's bursting with ingenuity and personality." Daniel Scheinert praised the film stating that it "is the key to making theatres fun, and is the future of cinema, and blew me away". It received an 8 out of 10 review from FilmInk. The film was given 4 out of 5 stars by Empire and The Guardian.
Matt Zoller Seitz, who gave the film a perfect 4 stars in his RogerEbert.com review, compared its low-budget filmmaking style to Eraserhead, El Mariachi, and the films of Wes Anderson. Joseph Johnson, writing in The Harvard Crimson, gave the film 4.5 stars and praised it as "a groundbreaking technical achievement" due to the large amounts of complex animations. Pete Volk, writing in Polygon, praised the film's visuals despite its small budget as it "nevertheless looks better than many modern blockbuster productions".
Accolades
References
Works cited
Kaufman, Anthony (2024). "Review This". Filmmaker. Vol. 33, no. 1. The Gotham Film & Media Institute.
External links
Official website
Hundreds of Beavers at IMDb
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
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