“a delightfully shaggy mistaken­identity comedy” ­ Guy Lodge, Variety

A frantic, antic nocturnal urban prologue introduces Claire (Wells) and Lisa Walker (Lowe), two

thirty­something sisters who are seemingly engaged in ecologically­motivated sabotage.

Bungling the theft of an industrial digger, the inept siblings escape into the countryside, where

they do prove successful in stealing a rather smaller form of motorized transport. The car they

make off with belongs to successful poets the Wilding sisters (Hannah Daniel, Claire Cage),

who were on their way to a literary retreat in the Welsh hills. The scatterbrained Walkers

capriciously decide to assume the Wildings' identity, and are welcomed unquestioningly upon

arrival at the remote farmhouse where the event is based.

Reportedly shot in just five days, Black Mountain Poets belies its minimal cost thanks to

cinematographer Ryan Owen Eddleston's fetching widescreen­digital renditions of the alluringly

elemental Welsh countryside. The picture exudes a beguilingly breezy and casual

unpretentiousness that chimes neatly with the Walkers' off­the­cuff approach to their "art",

exemplified when Lisa semi­mockingly turns the banal contents of a store receipt into a dramatic

poem.

Neil Young

The Hollywood Reporter