The Paper Store is a 2016 drama film directed by Nicholas Gray, and written by Gray and Katharine Clark Gray, adapted from the latter's play 516. The film is produced by Jonathan Gray, John Grossman, and casting director Bonnie Timmermann and stars Stef Dawson, Penn Badgley, and Richard Kind.
Synopsis
A revenge tale about a former college student who forges essays for money, the grad student who becomes her lover, and the professor who discovers their scheme.
Cast
Stef Dawson as Annalee Monegan
Penn Badgley as Sigurd Rossdale
Richard Kind as Professor Marty Kane
as Hooper
as Emily
as Reynaldo
Patrick Hogue as Bishop
Production
The Paper Store is a film adaptation of Katharine Clark Gray's play 516 , workshopped at the New York International Fringe Festival in 2007, with four out of five stars on Time Out. 516 received its first professional debut through Philadelphia Theater Workshop in 2010, culminating in plans to adapt the play into a film shortly thereafter. Katharine and her husband, Nicholas Gray, were producing partners at A Chip & A Chair Films for eight years before branching off to create Uncompromised Creative. The company partnered with producers Jonathan Gray, Bonnie Timmermann, John Grossman, executive producer Bruce Meyerson, and co-executive producers Actium Pictures and Matthew Bronson, to make The Paper Store, Uncompromised Creative's feature debut. Filming took place in New York City and Syracuse, NY.
Release
Exclusive video-on-demand rights in the U.S. and U.K. were licensed by Flix Premiere. The film was released on June 9, 2017 and June 17, 2017. On July 24, 2018 the movie became widely available via Amazon and iTunes on V.O.D., with DVD release to follow onOctober 9, 2018.
Reception
Named Best Drama of 2016 by the LA Film Review. The review called the script "expertly adapted" from its source material, and declared that the film "gives us a world that is far from black and white — one where it’s really easy to claim high standards, while simultaneously betraying them with the most plausible of explanations."
The Manchester Evening News named The Paper Store as one of the "six best films you have to see" of the Manchester Film Festival, and FranklyMyDear UK described it as "the ultimate tale of romance and revenge set in academia."
said that "few narrative films have touched on so pointedly or deftly as The Paper Store".