Nobody But Her (2010) Poster

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10/10
The most suspenseful seven minutes of your life...
LeahCatherineThompson8 March 2011
Very scary and the twist at the end came out of nowhere. It's the kind of film that leaves you wanting to watch it over and over again. The writing and directing was fantastic! Very dense with a lot of detail. The acting is top notch, especially the little girl and the two detectives. The story builds over the seven minutes to a crescendo of spine tingling suspense. The music is brilliant and adds so much to the mood and tone. The film also has a dark shadowy mood, very much influenced by noir film. It looks like it was shot on film (not sure if it was), the colors and shadows as well as the camera angles are top notch. I hope to see this film win many awards in festivals. To pull off what they did in 7 minutes was an amazing feat.
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10/10
Nobody But Her first class horror short
crockettl-105-67180713 July 2011
Director Philip Jordan Brooks' film, "Nobody But Her," is a well-crafted seven-minute horror short that has been nominated and winning awards in festivals from New York City to San Antonio, Texas. That is with good reason. "Nobody But Her" is a well-told cinematic short story. The filmmaker is like a writer focusing on brevity without benefit of a novel's expansiveness. Get to the point. As "Nobody But Her" opens, a dying old woman is seen crawling across a floor. She stops and points upward. In two quick shots, the viewer first sees a caged blackbird, then a pair of dangling young feet wearing red tennis shoes. Then comes a scene of a mist hovering over a lake, followed by a pastoral scene of a horse cropping grass in a meadow-like setting. In those first couple of minutes, Brooks has painted a picture of death contrasted by a bucolic, benign setting and offered viewers two symbols, the bird and the shoes, one we identify as a harbinger of death, and the other innocent and seemingly out of place. What then unfolds, as two detectives and a crime scene unit investigate, is a tale with a supernatural twist that will surprise some and have others immediately trying to read more into visual symbols for some deeper meaning. Whichever way the viewer chooses, director Brooks has given them a neat little chiller that may have nothing more on its mind than offering a shock. The two detectives discover a little girl sitting at the kitchen table. She appears to be catatonic and is wearing a pair of red tennis shoes. The older detective (Richard Folmer) has misgivings and believes there is something not right about the girl, who has yet to speak. The younger one (Scott Gannon Patton) has empathy for the child (Leah Thompson) and tries coaxing her to talk. He succeeds, and in a dead voice, the child relates that the dead woman is her grandmother and was cruel to her. A policeman pulls the older detective away to see a discovery that has been made in the backyard; the younger one continues to interview the child about the unloving relationship. Here, director Brooks does a clever job of juxtaposition as the viewer sees what is happening in exterior and interior scenes. And therein lies a nasty surprise. The short film is a challenge to the director, requiring economy and conciseness. Brooks has been immeasurably helped by the excellent camera-work of Chris Lyon, who also did a fine job of editing the film, and the three principal performances – Folmer's skeptical detective, Patton's understanding one and juvenile Thompson's understated young girl. Mention should also be made of Wade Marshall's original music score that certainly helps create the mood and the quiet sense of foreboding. Brooks' focus is admirable. There are no extraneous shots to take away from the ongoing action. It would be easy to become overly clever with a tale such as this one that can become a pitfall for young directors. Brooks, with a good sense of composition, has a grasp of this short form, and he cleanly delivers the goods. It will be interesting to see how his career develops if and when he moves out of the short form. Much is crammed into the seven minutes of "Nobody But Her." The tribute is, though, that it doesn't appear so.

LANE CROCKETT Former critic of the Gannett News Service and The Shreveport Times
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10/10
This film is awesome!
hellokittystylz28 August 2011
I can't say enough about this short film. Beautiful, moody, dark, suspenseful... it scared the crap out of me and it was only a few minutes long. You won't see the ending coming! which is a great quality for a horror film to have. The acting was really great especially the little girl. She was creepy. The two cops were legit as well. The music really enhanced the mood of the film as well. Phillip Brooks has a very bright future ahead of him. I saw this film at the Robinson Film Center and loved it! Congrats to all of its festival success as well. It seems to be playing all over the country. There is obviously a huge audience out there for such a cool short film. I hope it goes to Sundance, and SXSW next year, if it does I will be there to support it. xox <3
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beautiful and spare
katharyngrant14 July 2015
This haunting and suspenseful little film is like flash fiction-- no moment is wasted, and every detail draws you into the dark and engaging world of the characters. With less time to tell the story, each moment becomes endowed with a potency that gets right down to the bones. Taut and intriguing, this is a fantastic short that really delivers. Like all good stories it crackles with twists and turns, and well-delivered surprises. The cast is more than competent under the expert direction of Phillip Jordan Brooks. Everything works well; the wonderful locations, the well-written script, and notably, the young actress around whom the story revolves. With a minimum of time, this sparse film establishes an atmosphere of psychic dysphoria which many full length films would find enviable.
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