– Composer Hannah Lee blends metallic percussion with folk‑inspired strings, echoing the industrial roots of Millstone while offering an emotional undercurrent that rises with each character’s personal crescendo.
– Editor Marco D’Alessandro stitches together rapid cuts of reloading, tracking shots of the range, and intercut flashbacks that reveal Elliot’s past. The rhythm feels purposeful: frenetic during competition, contemplative in quiet moments. Rifle.Club.2024.720p.WEB-DL--1300MB--Feranki1980-
Title (working) “Rifle Club”: A Sharp‑Shooting Drama That Fires on All Cylinders Introduction (≈150 words) The 2024 release Rifle Club (720p WEB‑DL, 1.3 GB) arrives at a moment when the sports‑drama sub‑genre is experiencing a renaissance, blending gritty realism with an under‑current of social commentary. Directed by the up‑and‑coming Feranki1980, the film follows a disparate group of young marksmen as they navigate the pressures of competition, community expectations, and personal trauma. With its crisp cinematography, kinetic editing, and a soundtrack that oscillates between the reverberating crack of gunfire and the intimate hush of the characters’ inner lives, Rifle Club stakes its claim as a compelling entry in contemporary indie cinema. – Composer Hannah Lee blends metallic percussion with
This draft review will explore the film’s narrative arc, thematic resonance, performances, and technical execution, offering a balanced critique that can be refined for a final publication. Set in the fictional Rustbelt town of Millstone, Rifle Club opens with 17‑year‑old Elliot Hayes (Jaden Torres) returning home after a year at a juvenile detention center. He discovers the town’s aging rifle club—once a source of pride, now a fading relic—run by the stoic former champion Mick “Hawkeye” Dalton (Brian Cox). This draft review will explore the film’s narrative
Rifle Club is a must‑watch for fans of character‑driven sports dramas and for anyone interested in a fresh take on the intersection of tradition and change.
Elliot’s reluctant enrollment becomes a catalyst for change. He bonds with , a fiercely talented but under‑funded shooter; Liam O’Connor , a charismatic yet volatile veteran; and Sofia Alvarez , the club’s reluctant mechanic who dreams of engineering a safer, more inclusive sport. As the team prepares for the state championship, personal demons surface: Elliot wrestles with his past violence; Maya battles a family crisis that threatens her eligibility; Mick confronts his own fading relevance in a world that’s moved on from the sound of a rifle’s report.