— Susan Waugh, St. Louis Beacon
Excerpts:
“An award-winning independent film, "Radio Cape Cod" is a triple love story set on the beaches of Cape Cod, Mass. With gorgeous scenery and beautiful people, it's as relaxing and refreshing as a day on the beach -- and uplifting to boot....Among the film's many charms is its music. Rather than a single score tied to each frame, there are multiple compositions by musicians from all over the world who happened to be at Boston-area music schools. Everything from samba to harp music manages to work together unobtrusively -- as Silver said, "very soulful."Another is the film's being shot only in natural light. The sun-washed beauty of the scenes, inside and out, is breath-taking. As Silver said, "It's a kind of 'love the planet' rather than fear what will become of it."”
“The actors, especially the exuberant Outhwaite, are uniformly subtle and appealing, and screenwriter Marta Rainer's dialogue deftly dodges clichés while allowing the emotions at the core of the story to shine through. Another major plus is Michael Spindler's sumptuous photography. The quiet streets and windy beaches create a gentle background for Silver's cast. If this movie were in wide release, I have no doubt that it would attract as many tourists to New England beaches as "Jaws" scared away. One shot near the end of the film presenting a golden field of wheat blowing in the wind would make Terrence Malick jealous.
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— Gerard Quinn, filmthreat.com

“This feel-good film showcases the natural beauty of the Cape and is a must-see for anyone who loves the Cape or is a romantic at heart. Viewers call the film "beautiful, powerful, and very touching", citing "stunning photography, great acting, and an engaging, uplifting and stimulating story."”
— Falmouth Chamber Of Commerce, Coastline
“Director/producer Andrew Silver's Radio Cape Cod is indeed a labor of love. Saturated with a breathtaking elegance that radiates this low-key romancer, Silver definitely serves up a quaint love story set within the cosmetic confines of New England's blissful boundaries. Silver, whose usage of his academic background in natural ecology is key to the film's major symbolic effectiveness, accentuates the conception of the ocean as a cleansing experience for his character studies of undefined love. Enriching, methodical and visually arresting, Radio Cape Cod is an unconventional narrative in that it correlates its amorous themes with the nuances of nature and scientific curiosities.”
— Frank Ochieng, movieeye.com

“ "Radio Cape Cod" is director Andrew Silver's loving tribute to love, in its many expressions and stages, to the scenic beauty and natural ecology of Cape Cod, and to a slower-paced, slow food, slow motion way of life, as a respite from the frantic, fast-paced, fast food, MTV way of life and movies that most of us are familiar with. It is, in his words, "a summer love story without the baggage."”
— Marilyn J. Rowland, Falmouth Enterprise
“Set in Woods Hole, the environmentally friendly scientific hub of Cape Cod, Rainer's story has shades of other relationship-centric tales set in quirky New England towns.
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— Tenley Woodman, Boston Herald
“His newest, "Radio Cape Cod," which opens Friday at the Coolidge Corner Theatre, allowed him to get back to another interest. Silver did his undergraduate and masters work in oceanography and earth sciences at MIT (before earning a doctorate in Business Administration at Harvard). One of the plot strands his new film, the romantic drama "Radio Cape Cod," involves a team of oceanographers at Woods Hole.
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— Ed Symkus, WickedLocal.com
“BOSTON—"Radio Cape Cod"--a charming, multi-generational quartet of love stories that celebrates Woods Hole's iconic main street, pristine beaches and world-famous science--premieres May 23 at the Coolidge Corner Theatre in Brookline.”
