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Blood Father

  • 2016
  • 16
  • 1 Std. 28 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,4/10
69.637
IHRE BEWERTUNG
BELIEBTHEIT
3.104
107
Mel Gibson and Erin Moriarty in Blood Father (2016)
An ex-con reunites with his estranged wayward 16-year old daughter to protect her from drug dealers who are trying to kill her.
trailer wiedergeben1:53
9 Videos
99+ Fotos
Dark ComedyActionCrimeDramaThriller

Ein Ex-Sträfling nähert sich wieder seiner entfremdeten widerspenstigen 17-jährigen Tochter an, um sie vor Drogenhändlern zu schützen, die sie töten wollen.Ein Ex-Sträfling nähert sich wieder seiner entfremdeten widerspenstigen 17-jährigen Tochter an, um sie vor Drogenhändlern zu schützen, die sie töten wollen.Ein Ex-Sträfling nähert sich wieder seiner entfremdeten widerspenstigen 17-jährigen Tochter an, um sie vor Drogenhändlern zu schützen, die sie töten wollen.

  • Regie
    • Jean-François Richet
  • Drehbuch
    • Peter Craig
    • Andrea Berloff
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Mel Gibson
    • Erin Moriarty
    • Diego Luna
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,4/10
    69.637
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    BELIEBTHEIT
    3.104
    107
    • Regie
      • Jean-François Richet
    • Drehbuch
      • Peter Craig
      • Andrea Berloff
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Mel Gibson
      • Erin Moriarty
      • Diego Luna
    • 238Benutzerrezensionen
    • 166Kritische Rezensionen
    • 66Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Videos9

    Theatrical Trailer
    Trailer 1:53
    Theatrical Trailer
    International Trailer
    Trailer 1:31
    International Trailer
    International Trailer
    Trailer 1:31
    International Trailer
    Redband Clip
    Clip 1:08
    Redband Clip
    Clip
    Clip 1:12
    Clip
    Clip
    Clip 1:03
    Clip
    Exclusive Clip
    Clip 1:03
    Exclusive Clip

    Fotos215

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    Topbesetzung56

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    Mel Gibson
    Mel Gibson
    • Link
    Erin Moriarty
    Erin Moriarty
    • Lydia
    Diego Luna
    Diego Luna
    • Jonah
    Michael Parks
    Michael Parks
    • Preacher
    William H. Macy
    William H. Macy
    • Kirby
    Miguel Sandoval
    Miguel Sandoval
    • Arturo Rios
    Dale Dickey
    Dale Dickey
    • Cherise
    Richard Cabral
    Richard Cabral
    • Joker
    Daniel Moncada
    Daniel Moncada
    • Choop
    Ryan Dorsey
    Ryan Dorsey
    • Shamrock
    Raoul Max Trujillo
    Raoul Max Trujillo
    • The Cleaner
    • (as Raoul Trujillo)
    Brandi Cochran
    • Lydia's Mother
    Katalina Parrish
    Katalina Parrish
    • Link's Client
    Cameron Cipta
    • Freckles
    Lucien Dale
    Lucien Dale
    • Blonde Boy
    Joanne Camp
    Joanne Camp
    • Cashier
    Thomas Mann
    Thomas Mann
    • Jason Motel Clerk
    Tait Fletcher
    Tait Fletcher
    • Bartender
    • Regie
      • Jean-François Richet
    • Drehbuch
      • Peter Craig
      • Andrea Berloff
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen238

    6,469.6K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    m1965

    I Miss Mel Gibson

    I'm old enough to have watched all the Lethal Weapon's at the theater. They were some of the best action/buddy movies I've ever seen. Mel Gibson is a great actor. He reinvented the tough guy. He's got a persona that few have on the big silver screen. The fact that Hollywood turned their back on him is nothing short of a crime. Well - he's back and he's doing what he does best - and I for one am thankful. I just recently saw another movie he's done called "Get the Gringo". Another amazing movie steeped in great dialog, action and classic Gibson lines and scenes.

    This movie is every father's nightmare. A child or yours has gotten themselves intertwined with some pretty bad dudes and you're the only person that can fix it. Gibson delivers on all levels - providing a character that isn't completely foreign - but new enough to be interesting and engaging. William H. Macy as always delivers some great scenes - and the only disappointment was the lack of on-screen time devoted to Macy and Gibson's character development. Short - but effective. Erin Moriarty was a breath of fresh air - and her character and acting worked well with Gibson's.

    This movie is classic Gibson. Great dialog, story and acting. 8 out of 10!
    7plpregent

    Qualities make up for the flaws – good, gritty entertainment

    Although Blood Father does not bring anything new to the table in terms of storytelling, it manages to provide decent entertainment by taking advantage of its filming locations, a good cast and somewhat interesting, although undeveloped, lead characters.

    Link (Mel Gibson) is an ex-con turned tattoo artist and former alcoholic who lives a reasonably quiet life in a trailer park home. One day, he receives a phone call from his daughter, Lydia, who has gone missing for many years, and who's seeking help, as drug dealers and law enforcement are trying to track her down. Sounds familiar? It probably does. It's a very classic story, and make no mistake about it, this tale is quite typical of the genre. I would even go as far as to say that story-wise, this film is sub-par and plot development is almost nonexistent. Add an anticlimactic and abrupt ending, and an almost shameful use of pretty interesting supporting characters, one has to wonder what Blood Father really has to offer.

    The answer is an overall pretty good time, despite its flaws, thanks to sympathetic characters, above-average dialogue for the genre, some gritty moments, very welcome touches of humor and great cinematography. Jean-François Richet, who directed the biographical films about Jacques Mesrine, does a pretty good job too.

    Again, it's a shame to make such little use of Kirby (William H. Macy) and Preacher (Michael Parks), but their presence is appreciated while it lasts. The Sicario character's first appearance is blood chilling, but unfortunately, the character's mystique evaporates from lack of screen time and further significant appearances. Mel Gibson is perfect in his role and Erin Moriarty (Lydia) is pretty good as well. The chemistry between both characters is tangible, and the generational clash sub-theme is subtle, but interesting nonetheless. Moreover, there are a few sequences, such as the first scene at the store and the scene when Link and Lydia are in the back of a truck filled with illegal Mexican immigrants, where the film humorously takes aim at some absurdities, such as a minor buying boxes of ammo without being asked for her ID, but being denied a pack of cigarettes because she's underage, or Lydia countering her dad's argument that illegal Mexican immigrants are "stealing" fruit-picking jobs from white Americans.

    While the film offers some nice set-pieces, as a sequence of events, Blood Father's script does not profit from the best possible dramatic continuity, and ultimately falls short on delivering any truly memorable moment whatsoever. In that regard, the writing feels very uneven, as it delivers in the dialogue department, but lacks truly interesting ideas or ingenuity story-wise.

    That being said, its qualities are likely to draw you in for its hour and a half runtime, and should manage to entertain anyone who likes this type of flick.
    6tomgillespie2002

    Pure B-movie exploitation

    After years of hard-drinking and heavily publicised, hateful rants, Mel Gibson has seen his career plunge from the A-list to the, well, non-existent list. He was once one of the most bankable stars in Hollywood, handsome enough to draw a female audience with lighthearted rom-coms, and suitably bad-ass enough to tackle the meatier action roles. He of course only has himself to blame, but Gibson has been slowly and quietly carving himself a niche with the few features he's done over past few the years - Edge of Darkness (2010), How I Spent My Summer Vacation (2012) - as a gruff enforcer not necessarily on the right side of the law.

    With Jean-Francois Richet's Blood Father, the years of hard living etched on Gibson's face have never served him better. His character John Link, the recovering alcoholic ex-con getting by as a tattoo artist in a trailer park, acknowledges his past mistakes in the opening scene at an AA meeting, almost as if Gibson himself is pleading forgiveness for his behaviour. He is trying to live straight and keep his parole officer happy, but his peaceful existence is soon turned on its head when his daughter Lydia (Erin Moriarty), missing for years, turns up with the police and a Mexican cartel hunting her down. Fearing losing the daughter he failed when she was still a child, John takes her on the road and uses the skills he learned as a criminal to keep her out of harm's way.

    With Mad Max (1979) clearly serving as an inspiration, Blood Father is pure B-movie exploitation. It's the kind of film you could imagine being made in the 70's with Peter Fonda in the lead role and Roger Corman producing. That said, and despite the odd explosion of action and violence, the focus is mainly on character. While this would normally be a good thing, it does so via every cliché imaginable. There's the wanted posters, news reports in dingy hotel rooms, changing of hair colour, and a climactic shoot-out, and it frequently felt like I had seen the film before. It's best when at its most furious, racking up the tension as Link faces a neo-Nazi biker gang and Lydia's drug-lord ex-boyfriend Jonah (Diego Luna). It might just be enough for Hollywood to embrace Gibson again, and from his performance here, I realised just how much I miss him.
    searchanddestroy-1

    The resurrection of Mel Gibson

    It was so refreshing for me, and I am sure for many other people, to see in this film the re birth of this such great actor and director Mel Gibson. His performance in this film reminds me the one he had six years ago in EDGE OF DARKNESS. Nearly the same topic with a lost father in search of his daughter, or in avenging her death. In both features, Mel Gibson is at his top. And I am also pleased that this latest film was made by a French director, already guilty of ASSAULT ON PRECINCT 13, back ten years ago. I won't mention the MESRINE films. Not for foreseeable plot and also a bit depressing, although not totally clichés ridden. But it remains an excellent crime flick. I really hope that Mel Gibson will rapidly be back to the top.
    8Ser_Stephen_Seaworth

    Mad Mel's back to settle the score.

    When we first meet John Link, Mel Gibson's grizzled ex-con anti-hero in his latest thriller Blood Father, he's in the midst of an impassioned soliloquy at an AA meeting. A self-proclaimed "real success story," Link is a recovering alky two years out of the slammer, whose wife left him and whose daughter is in the wind, leaving him with no one in his corner and with no one to blame but himself. It's a fitting noir-esque introduction to Link, but also—perhaps more appropriately, especially as he's talking straight at the camera when he says it—it seems to be coming from Gibson himself.

    Directed by Jean-François Richet, who helmed 2008's gripping gangster diptych Mesrine, Blood Father seems at first glance to be another addition to the tried-and-true Gibson formula: a brutal guy on the wrong side of the tracks takes on those who wronged him, often in typically gruesome fashion. Certainly, John Link could be blood brothers with Porter and Driver, Gibson's violent protagonists from Payback and Get the Gringo. Living on the fringe of society while scratching out a living as a tattoo artist from his grungy desert trailer, Link is as blunt and terse as his monosyllabic name would suggest. The difference is that Blood Father feels like Gibson confronting the demons that put him and his career on the skids over the last decade. His performance feels like penance, and not in a negative way. Gibson's mainstay has always been passion—in both definitions of the word—and here he bares himself to the bone.

    Link's efforts to stay on the straight and narrow are complicated by the cataclysmic arrival of his wayward daughter Lydia (Erin Moriarty). Strung-out and on the run from a bunch of bad customers, Lydia's presence puts her father on an inexorable course towards violence—which, of course, he excels at dishing out. And true to form for a Mel Gibson joint, there is no shortage of it: once the blood starts flowing and the bullets start flying, it's hard to stop.

    Gibson's trademark wild-man intensity is in full froth here, and it's always a welcome sight to behold, even if it's been in otherwise subpar productions or against lesser actors. For the most part, fortunately, Blood Father isn't pigeonholed in either category. While some of the dialogue sounds more than a little ponderous (Lydia spends much of the film spitting out sheaves of insight with such precision that you'd think she were a Sorkinian heroine instead of, well, someone who snorts heroin), the rest of it is balanced in taut, punchy lines that would make Hemingway proud. And unlike Get the Gringo, which featured Gibson at the top of his game making his co-stars look downright amateurish, he's bolstered by some reliable names this go-around: among them, William H. Macy as Link's good-natured AA sponsor and Michael Parks as a seedy old contact from his past. In fact, the only real weak link of the cast is Moriarty, whose erratic performance is far too self-conscious and unconvincing for us to really care about her plight. It's only through Gibson that we care (and to his credit, he does and we do).

    Much of Blood Father is a foregone conclusion, all the way up to its bullet-riddled finale. And while the film rarely evinces an inspired note, it's still a good potboiler, and there's nothing wrong with a well-worn story if it's well-told. But with an actor like Gibson at the fore, it becomes something more personal. Blood Father's about a man facing old sins and the grim reckoning that comes with them. And every single one of Mad Mel's is on full display here.

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      In 2008, Sylvester Stallone was planning to direct and star in an adaptation of Peter Craig's novel "Blood Father".
    • Patzer
      Lydia is wanted by drug dealers that know her cell phone number, and by law enforcement that could easily track her yet, for some reason, she keeps the phone.
    • Zitate

      Kirby: You know the difference between fitting and proper?

      Link: Well, I'm not a trailer park poet like you, Kirby. You're gonna have to tell me.

      Kirby: Well, it goes like this. I could shove my thumb up your ass right now and it would probably fit...

      Link: Mmm-hmm.

      Kirby: ...but it wouldn't be proper!

    • Alternative Versionen
      The German extended TV version runs almost 10 mins longer than the original version, with 21 extended scenes and one additional scene.
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Lost Souls: On the Road with 'Blood Father' (2016)
    • Soundtracks
      Native Blood
      Performed by' Ronald Jean' Quartet

      featuring Jerry Donato

      Written by Ronald Edwin Jean

      Courtesy of Crucial Music Corporation

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Blood Father?Powered by Alexa
    • Why is it called Blood Father?

    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 26. August 2016 (Vereinigte Staaten)
    • Herkunftsländer
      • Frankreich
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Offizieller Standort
      • Official site (Japan)
    • Sprachen
      • Englisch
      • Spanisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Sangre de mi sangre
    • Drehorte
      • Belen, New Mexico, USA
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Lionsgate
      • Why Not Productions
      • Wild Bunch
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    Box Office

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    • Budget
      • 13.000.000 $ (geschätzt)
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 6.903.033 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      1 Stunde 28 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 2.35 : 1

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    Mel Gibson and Erin Moriarty in Blood Father (2016)
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