Event to celebrate film ‘The Passing Season’ — filmed in Little Compton

Posted 4/23/17

LITTLE COMPTON — Feature film “The Passing Season,” shot mostly in Little Compton, the hometown of director Gabriel Long, will be celebrated at Aurora Providence with a special screening and …

This item is available in full to subscribers.

Please log in to continue

Log in

Register to post events


If you'd like to post an event to our calendar, you can create a free account by clicking here.

Note that free accounts do not have access to our subscriber-only content.

Day pass subscribers

Are you a day pass subscriber who needs to log in? Click here to continue.


Event to celebrate film ‘The Passing Season’ — filmed in Little Compton

Posted

LITTLE COMPTON — Feature film “The Passing Season,” shot mostly in Little Compton, the hometown of director Gabriel Long, will be celebrated at Aurora Providence with a special screening and release party on May 10. The event marks the film’s release on Amazon, iTunes.

Mr. Long and his wife and producer Rebecca Atwood will be in attendance. After shooting the film Little Compton, the filmmaker pair decided to leave Brooklyn and make Providence their permanent home.

The party and film screening is free and open to the public (although not suited for youngsters). Showtime is 6:30 p.m. (running time is 67 minutes) at Aurora Providence, 276 Westminster St.

The film follows Sam Alden, a professional hockey player whose career comes to a sudden end.  Alden (played by Sense8 star Brian J. Smith) returns to his hometown and reconnects with a group of buddies who never left rural Rhode Island.

Picking up where he left off after high school, he tries to leave his failed career behind and return to a simpler, more exciting time in his life. But recapturing innocence turns out to be more complicated than he imagined, and the harder he pursues adventure and escape, the wider the rift becomes between his youthful dreams and his adult reality.

Little Compton was both a great place to spend childhood and a superb backdrop for the film, Mr. Long said.

 “If you grow up in a beautiful place, there's a seductive quality to your hometown.  You think about the magic of that beauty and think about the sense of possibility that you felt riding around with your high school crush. It’s tempting to think that by returning to the place you can return to that feeling,” he said.

“The reality is that those feelings are about being young, and going back to the place where they happened isn't going to bring them back.  That’s something I’ve struggled with, and it’s what Sam struggles with in the film.”

2024 by East Bay Media Group

Barrington · Bristol · East Providence · Little Compton · Portsmouth · Tiverton · Warren · Westport
Meet our staff
Mike Rego

Mike Rego has worked at East Bay Newspapers since 2001, helping the company launch The Westport Shorelines. He soon after became a Sports Editor, spending the next 10-plus years in that role before taking over as editor of The East Providence Post in February of 2012. To contact Mike about The Post or to submit information, suggest story ideas or photo opportunities, etc. in East Providence, email mrego@eastbaymediagroup.com.