The Peril at Pincer Point

Filmmakers Jake Kuhn and Noah Stratton-Twine really both just said we’re gonna make a whole damn movie and it’s gonna premiere at SXSW 2026. An ode to the late, great Roger Corman, The Peril at Pincer Point is indie filmmaking at its finest. It is no wonder it won the NEON Auteur Award!
The audience follows Jack, an aspiring sound recordist, who must impress his idol director, leading him on a mission. He must find the voice of a young woman who resides on a mysterious and remote island. Along the way, he meets the island’s residents. Each quirky in their own way. Each knowing more than they let on. While Jack wanders the island recording unusual audio, he becomes entangled in an old fisherman’s fable, one that might be reeling Jack in for more than he bargained for.
Dialogue is over-the-top quippy and hilarious. You’re never quite sure what might pop out of anyone’s mouth. Jack Redmayne gives our protagonist Jim a wildly hopeful air. This is a man hellbent on proving himself no matter the cost. Redmayne fully leans into the style Kuhn and Stratton-Twine give him to explore. The film looks like a handcrafted theatre set. Shot in black and white, it might read like a student film to anyone outside the industry, but this is a love letter to the limitless possibilities of the storytelling mind and imagination. The Peril at Pincer Point is almost challenging to describe. It stands toe-to-toe with other festival discoveries that you hear cinephiles talk about years later. It becomes a fisherman’s tale itself.
The Peril at Pincer Point
Section: Visions
Directed by: Noah Stratton-Twine, Jake Kuhn
Screenwriter: Noah Stratton-Twine, Jake Kuhn
Producer: Noah Stratton-Twine, Jake Kuhn
Executive Producer: Igor Engler, Caroline Burton
Editor: Noah Stratton-Twine
Starring: Jack Redmayne, Alyth Ross, Os Leanse, Jason Hogan, Heidi Parsons, Dashiell Upton, Isobel Laidler, Mike Mackenzie, Mat Wright
Run Time: 83 minutes
Genre: Comedy, Mystery


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