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Amplify Her

Play trailer 2:09 Poster for Amplify Her Released Jun 28, 2019 1h 28m Documentary Music Play Trailer Watchlist
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Rising stars in the electronic music scene come of age during the cultural renaissance of the feminine.

Audience Reviews

View All (7) audience reviews
Audience Member Amplify Her is a remarkable new documentary about several female electronic dance music artists. I couldn't look away. The film is incredibly interesting and well crafted by its directors -- Nicole Sorochan and Ian MacKenzie. Amplify Her moves seamlessly from interviews to concert footage to animated sequences. I'm always a sucker for animated sequences in documentaries. They just seem to grab my attention and add a dynamic layer to documentaries that can sometimes otherwise feel a bit too straightforward and routine. As for the story content, it is quite compelling. The stories of these women artists are both riveting and feel important. This kind of a film is truly refreshing and necessary today. If you're into EDM, powerful stories about women, or documentaries in general then I think you should check out Amplify Her! Rated 5 out of 5 stars 02/05/23 Full Review Audience Member An extremely well crafted look at various women's artistic input into our world, as well as their trials, experiences and victories. Clearly a passion project that keeps you engaged throughout. Highly Recommended. Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars 02/08/23 Full Review Audience Member With Amplify Her, Nicole Sorochan and Ian Mackenzie have crafted a fascinating documentary exploring the uniquely individual perspectives of seven female electronic music artists operating in a historically male-dominated landscape. And while they all share a desire to be afforded only the opportunities their elite and disparate skillsets command, their observations, beliefs, and rationales for wanting to get there are highly nuanced from one artist to the next. There's a moment in Amplify Her when the fascinating and insightful Blondtron is performing at a festival. Behind her, a series of festival organizers (all male) and other festival artists (yep, all male) are aggressively starting to push in on her stage show during a set that she's already shortened under immense coercive pressure. Soon, somehow it's Blondtron - after verbally defending her right to perform without infringement - that's been removed from the stage and from the festival as a whole (tough guys gotta put the little woman in her place, apparently). It's a profoundly agitating yet totally engrossing thing to watch. As a viewer, you might be interested to know that Amplify Her was shot before #MeToo was given a name and a set of values to wear that can indeed be wonderfully empowering and equalizing, but not without some arguable homogenization as a perceived side-effect. Would these male cretins have behaved the same way today – on- or off-camera – now that the spotlight has been rightfully refocused to better include the talents and plights of women? Are females in the music field now getting the opportunities their individual gifts always should've entitled them to? And if so, are they getting them because the art is appropriately being heralded, or because festivals are crudely wishing to commodify these societal shifts? Sounds like we need a sequel to find out! It's hard to escape the notion that while Sorochan and Mackenzie may have set out only to create a film championing the incredible gifts of female electronic music artists in a male-entrenched world, what they've stumbled on here is much, much bigger: Though our society's transformation since its filming, the female artists in Amplify Her are now prophetic identities in hindsight; kind of sort of full-blown heroic shatterers of that ornery, no-longer-only-male-curated glass ceiling. There is still so much work to do out there, but as we look back on the short-term and give thanks to the faces and names that got us to this more evolved space, Amplify Her has become nothing short of absolutely critical viewing. Rated 5 out of 5 stars 02/18/23 Full Review Audience Member What a stunning film! This was one terrific film from beginning to end. I loved how it was shot! I thoroughly enjoyed the stories of the DJ's. I found myself really getting into their personal lives and rooting for them. It was easy to do because they were so well developed by the Directors by Ian Mackenzie and Nicole Sorochan. This is what indie filmmaking is all about to me. There was never a dull moment. A big thumbs up from me. Rated 5 out of 5 stars 01/30/23 Full Review Audience Member This film has some powerful, poignant and personal glimpses into the lives of female creatives in the electronic music world. Its timely capture of rising stars AppleCat and Clozee in particular have a resonant poqer that will keep the dancers moving from stsrt to finish with powrful imagery stories and captivating interviews. Rated 5 out of 5 stars 02/08/23 Full Review Audience Member The directors found some really incredible characters to feature in the film, with such diverse backgrounds. Compelling storyline, I was laughing one moment and had tears the next. Loved the blend with the animation, so beautifully done. I understand the film was mainly brought to life by female creatives (animators, illustrators, etc) so it's really empowering women in the arts both on screen and behind screen! Rated 5 out of 5 stars 02/26/23 Full Review Read all reviews
Amplify Her

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Cast & Crew

Movie Info

Synopsis Rising stars in the electronic music scene come of age during the cultural renaissance of the feminine.
Director
Ian Mackenzie
Producer
Erin Skillen, Nicole Sorochan
Screenwriter
Tracey Friesen
Distributor
Indie Rights
Genre
Documentary, Music
Original Language
English
Release Date (Theaters)
Jun 28, 2019, Limited
Release Date (Streaming)
Jul 1, 2019
Runtime
1h 28m