Shelf Life (film)

{{Infobox film

| name = Shelf Life

| image =

| caption =

| director = Paul Bartel

| producer = {{ubl|Anne Kimmel|Bradley Laven}}

| writer = {{ubl|O-Lan Jones|Andrea Stein|Jim Turner}}

| narrator =

| starring = {{ubl|O-Lan Jones|Andrea Stein|Jim Turner}}

| music = Andy Paley

| cinematography = Philip Holahan

| editing = Judd H. Maslansky

| distributor = Northern Arts

| released = {{Film date|1993|2||Palm Springs Film Festival}}

| runtime = 81 min.

| country = United States

| language = English

| budget =

| gross =

}}

Shelf Life is a 1993 American comedy-drama film directed by Paul Bartel. The final film Bartel directed before he died in 2000, it stars O-Lan Jones, Andrea Stein, and Jim Turner.{{Cite web|url=http://allmovie.com/work/shelf-life-135380|title=Shelf Life (1992) - Paul Bartel | Synopsis, Characteristics, Moods, Themes and Related | AllMovie}}

Plot

Following the assassination of John F. Kennedy in 1963, a Californian family head to their nuclear bunker. The film returns thirty years later and 40 feet underground with a typical day for the children, Tina, Pam and Scotty, still in the bunker, together with their now dead parents.

Cast

Production

The film originated as a stage show, written and performed by Jones, Stein and Turner. Bartel saw the show at the Lex Theater in Hollywood and the film went into production six weeks after the show ended. The film was shot on a very low budget.{{cite magazine|magazine=Sight and Sound|date=April 2022|page=99|title=Lost and Found|last=Flew|first=Thomas}}

The film is dedicated "For the Garys" in reference to the founders of Filmex who died in 1992.

Release

A work-in-progress was screened at the Palm Springs Film Festival in January 1993.

Thirty-two years after its limited festival run, a 35mm print was discovered and the film was released for the first time to the public on DVD, Blu-ray and VOD by distributor Liberation Hall. {{cite web | url= https://www.blu-ray.com/news/?id=35678/ | title=Shelf Life - Blu-ray announcement | website=blu-ray.com | access-date=January 21, 2025}}

Reception

Todd McCarthy of Variety called it a "microcosmic commentary on vaunted family values and media generation" and that it "features some of the best direction in any of [Bartel]'s films".{{cite magazine|magazine=Daily Variety|author-link=Todd McCarthy|first=Todd|last=McCarthy|title=Film reviews: Shelf Life|page=14|date=February 9, 1993}}

References

{{reflist}}