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Sophy Romvari’s feature debut Blue Heron, a semi‑autobiographical drama filmed in British Columbia, is drawing strong reviews and industry attention as it opens in Canadian theatres.
The film — set on Vancouver Island in the 1990s and running roughly 90 minutes — follows eight‑year‑old Sasha (Eylul Guven) and her family as they struggle to understand the erratic, self‑destructive behaviour of her teenage half‑brother Jeremy (Edik Beddoes). Critics have praised Romvari’s formal inventiveness: archival textures, shifting perspectives and an audacious time‑jump into the present in which adult Sasha (Amy Zimmer) investigates her past.
Cinematographer Maya Bankovic’s work and the young cast’s performances have been singled out.
Blue Heron was shot in Vancouver and Nanaimo, opens in Toronto April 24 (with wider Canadian dates in May), and has received seven 2026 Canadian Screen Award nominations including Best Picture, Best Director, Best Original Screenplay and a Best Supporting Actor nod for Beddoes.
Reviewers compare its emotional terrain to recent autobiographical films while noting its restrained refusal to offer tidy catharsis.







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