Sisterhood

Sisterhood 5v36z

2008 "Some People Shouldn't be Related"
Sisterhood
Sisterhood

Sisterhood 5v36z

6.3 | 1h30m | en | Comedy

Catherine St.John-Burke is an independent, uptight, status obsessed, sophisticated, British woman, living alone in London's Chelsea, and doing herself no favors by having an affair with a married man. Her world is turned upside down when she comes home one day to discover an uneducated, Kiwi woman (with very hairy legs) drinking beer in her living room. Shirley Zachary claims to be Catherine's long lost half-sister and that their father, who Catherine thought died when she was a child, is still alive and trying to make claims on both of their properties following the death of their mothers! Furious and frustrated with Shirley's refusal to 'disappear', Shirley reluctantly agrees to undertake a DNA test.

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6.3 | 1h30m | en | More Info
Released: October. 17,2008 | Released Producted By: Sirokh Fenn , Cork Films Country: United Kingdom Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
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Catherine St.John-Burke is an independent, uptight, status obsessed, sophisticated, British woman, living alone in London's Chelsea, and doing herself no favors by having an affair with a married man. Her world is turned upside down when she comes home one day to discover an uneducated, Kiwi woman (with very hairy legs) drinking beer in her living room. Shirley Zachary claims to be Catherine's long lost half-sister and that their father, who Catherine thought died when she was a child, is still alive and trying to make claims on both of their properties following the death of their mothers! Furious and frustrated with Shirley's refusal to 'disappear', Shirley reluctantly agrees to undertake a DNA test.

Genre

Comedy

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Cast

Emily Corcoran

Director

Jodie Stack

Producted By

Sirokh Fenn

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  • Top Credited Cast
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  • Crew
Jodie Stack
Jodie Stack

Art Direction

Nicola Dietmann
Nicola Dietmann

Production Design

John Chrisstoffels
John Chrisstoffels

Director of Photography

Nathan Sheppard
Nathan Sheppard

Director of Photography

Nikki Dye
Nikki Dye

Costume Design

Tess Kurzeme
Tess Kurzeme

Costume Design

Elizabeth O'Sullivan
Elizabeth O'Sullivan

Makeup Artist

Anna Wilson-Soppitt
Anna Wilson-Soppitt

Makeup Department Head

Victoria Mackworth
Victoria Mackworth

Script Supervisor

Sean Barton
Sean Barton

Editor

Gillian Hawser
Tim Hart
Tim Hart

Producer

Emily Corcoran
Emily Corcoran

Producer

Paul Lawler

Sisterhood Audience Reviews 4z5r34

Afouotos Although it has its amusing moments, in eneral the plot does not convince.
Grimossfer Clever and entertaining enough to recommend even to of the 1%
Voxitype Good films always raise compelling questions, whether the format is fiction or documentary fact.
Rio Hayward All of these films share one commonality, that being a kind of emotional center that humanizes a cast of monsters.
meelzebub If you watch the trailer to Sisterhood, you could be forgiven for thinking it's going to be just another chick flick. Fortunately, you'd be wrong. Very wrong indeed. Sisterhood is almost indecently funny.I don't like chick flicks. There's usually a mildly amusing premise to the film and a predictably sentimental ending with a few smiles raised in between - if you're lucky. Plenty of them fall into car crash entertainment and have me cringing. Sisterhood beats all of this because, in essence, it isn't a chick flick. It's a well-produced, beautifully directed comedy. Sure, it has a sentimental side to it, but sentimentality is more likely to take a pie - or a cowpat - in the face in this film, meaning that it keeps its edge and leaves audiences of both sexes entertained.There are moments of sheer, comic laugh-out-loud genius in this film. Do go into the film with your silly side firmly plugged in. This is not a film for polite titters, it's for people who genuinely enjoy laughing and still hope that, in a cinema somewhere, there is a film that seeks only to entertain, without getting bogged down in making its stars unattainably perfect, or trying too hard to be the next big thing.This is a great British comedy, with a nice Kiwi twist that keeps it from falling into the saccharine traps of Richard Curtis' latter outings. And when you consider it was made for just £75,000, you can't help but wonder what they could do with a larger budget.Can't recommend the film highly enough: go and see it!