Screened as part of NZIFF 2011

Tiny Furniture 2010

Directed by Lena Dunham

Actor/writer/director Lena Dunham made indie headlines with this autobiographical comedy. “The honest story of a young woman’s vulnerable desires and a bemused satire of real-life Gossip Girlhood.” — Entertainment Weekly

USA In English
98 minutes HDCAM

Director, Screenplay

Producers

Kyle Martin
,
Alicia Van Couvering

Photography

Jody Lee Lipes

Editor

Lance Edmands

Music

Teddy Blanks

With

Lena Dunham (Aura)
,
Laurie Simmons (Siri)
,
Grace Dunham (Nadine)
,
Rachel Howe (Candice)
,
Merritt Wever (Frankie)
,
Amy Seimetz (Ashlynn)
,
Alex Karpovsky (Jed)
,
Jemima Kirke (Charlotte)
,
David Call (Keith)
,
Sarah Sophie Flicker (Julia)

Festivals

SXSW 2010

Awards

Jury Award (Narrative Feature), SXSW Film Festival 2010

Elsewhere

“This award-winning indie discovery is fair warning that the 24-year-old Dunham – who also stars in a role modeled so closely on her life that she shot the film in her family’s stark, artsy loft in lower Manhattan – is a big talent to be reckoned with, a storyteller of gigantic charm and subtlety, and a filmmaker of exciting feminine originality.

In this spare, low-budget existential comedy about having no career path, no boyfriend, no income, and no independent place to live Dunham disguises herself in plain sight as a new college graduate named Aura who’s still smarting after a recent breakup. So she moves back from herOhiodorm to Mom’s NYC place while she figures out what to do next. Aura’s artist mother (played with cool aplomb by Dunham’s artist mother, Laurie Simmons) is underwhelmed by her older daughter’s return; Aura’s sylphier, overachieving younger sister, Nadine (played with teen cheek by Dunham’s sylphier younger sister, Grace Dunham), is positively snotty about having a sibling back in the female mix…

As Aura bravely fumbles with a crummy restaurant job, a couple of feckless guys and frenemy advice from a dreadfully sophisticated childhood friend (a great turn for Dunham’s pal Jemima Kirke), the filmmaker maintains seemingly effortless control of the movie’s vertiginous shifts in scale… Tiny Furniture is the honest story of a young woman’s vulnerable desires and a bemused satire of real-life Gossip Girlhood. It’s a tiny tale of inertia, and it’s also the grand triumph of a young artist with a mature trust in her own unique voice.” — Lisa Schwarzbaum, Entertainment Weekly