The Man from Earth: Holocene
- 2017
- 1h 38min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
5.2/10
11 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
John Oldman tiene 14 000 años y descubre que está empezando a envejecer.John Oldman tiene 14 000 años y descubre que está empezando a envejecer.John Oldman tiene 14 000 años y descubre que está empezando a envejecer.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Premios
- 3 nominaciones en total
Ellen Crawford
- Edith
- (material de archivo)
Annika Peterson
- Sandy
- (material de archivo)
Ricky Crawford
- Garcetti
- (as Rick Crawford)
Opiniones destacadas
IMHO first movie was everything: Interesting, clever, intriguing, intelligent, captivating, just continue with superlatives...
Heck, I registered here just to be able to rate it, and I've praised it to my friends. Most of them liked it as well.
I was thrilled when I've heard about this sequel and I was eager to watch it.
Now I would like to un-watch it, because it was completely unnecessary, it actually destroyed mystique of first movie.
What a disappointment. I was lured by the title "The Man from Earth" but didn't pay too much to the appendix word "Holocene" behind it. When I peaked my interest to watch it, then the "Holo..." of that word suddenly became "HollowScene". What a lousy sequel, man. It totally ruined my good memory of the original one. With some very annoying and unlikable college students, especially that pretentious and disgusting white girl's performance, this film has simply turned into a disastrous, shallow, predictable, torturous, absolutely unwatchable B movie. This film does not deserve a long review, so I rest my case.
Movie is watchable, and thats all. No compelling story, no atmopshere, music didnt fit. Students acting was hard to watch, and the ending ruined it all for me. First one wich i consider one of the best movies ever made i could watch all day and night but this one i will erase from my memory. 5 is generous
"The Man from Earth" is one of my favorite movies. It is a masterful story, and David Lee Smith's portrayal of a man who was ultimately looking for a debate with other scholars held me fast. It is, however, a standalone film that has no need for a sequel.
Cut to "The Man from Earth: Holocene", which can be forgiven for the no-budget presentation (heck, the first movie looked worse), and even though the actors typically have dialog that isn't insultingly bad, their lack of physical investment in WHAT they are saying truly IS bad. It can be frustrating to watch actors talking, while their arms are wrapped around their torso awkwardly, or they stand around with their arms at their sides, with body language that negates what is being SAID.
Worst of all, this movie takes one of the more uninteresting aspects of John Oldman's debates about his past, and decides to dedicate an entire movie to that single concept of who he was, or what he did during a small sliver of time. Near the halfway point of this movie, it goes from "I don't get why this movie is being made, but fine, whatever" to "Oh hell naw! No you DIDN'T!"
John ends up being forced to debate with one of his students, in a predicament that John shouldn't have been put into in the first place. This half hour is dreadful. It makes those who might be in the student's favor look like idiots. Whether or not I believe with either party's opinion, I think the third act should only have been considered during a rough draft discussion, then laughed off and tossed aside. never to be written into a screenplay. The "debate" and discussion that proceeds for most of the rest of the movie manages to delve deeper into a downward spiral of insipid immaturity, and every character makes the WRONG decision when it's time to act. My initial impression about a sequel to "The Man from Earth" could not have been more right: Just Let It Be. Don't Touch It. Instead, this sequel was made, and ended up puking on the unique storytelling mastery of the first movie. Skip it. Watch the first one again.
Cut to "The Man from Earth: Holocene", which can be forgiven for the no-budget presentation (heck, the first movie looked worse), and even though the actors typically have dialog that isn't insultingly bad, their lack of physical investment in WHAT they are saying truly IS bad. It can be frustrating to watch actors talking, while their arms are wrapped around their torso awkwardly, or they stand around with their arms at their sides, with body language that negates what is being SAID.
Worst of all, this movie takes one of the more uninteresting aspects of John Oldman's debates about his past, and decides to dedicate an entire movie to that single concept of who he was, or what he did during a small sliver of time. Near the halfway point of this movie, it goes from "I don't get why this movie is being made, but fine, whatever" to "Oh hell naw! No you DIDN'T!"
John ends up being forced to debate with one of his students, in a predicament that John shouldn't have been put into in the first place. This half hour is dreadful. It makes those who might be in the student's favor look like idiots. Whether or not I believe with either party's opinion, I think the third act should only have been considered during a rough draft discussion, then laughed off and tossed aside. never to be written into a screenplay. The "debate" and discussion that proceeds for most of the rest of the movie manages to delve deeper into a downward spiral of insipid immaturity, and every character makes the WRONG decision when it's time to act. My initial impression about a sequel to "The Man from Earth" could not have been more right: Just Let It Be. Don't Touch It. Instead, this sequel was made, and ended up puking on the unique storytelling mastery of the first movie. Skip it. Watch the first one again.
- As a bonus, there's a mid-credit scene that hints at a sequel. One that is guaranteed to dive deeper into that hole in which rabbits probably poop into.
I only gave three stars because of David Lee Smith. I can't forgive myself for ignoring all the negative reviews and deciding to give this a shot anyway. To the fans of the original film: don't watch this. Seriously, just don't. Watch the original one more time instead.
It's very hard to believe Holocene was created by the same people. The script, the casting - everything is so much worse. Acting by the four kids is just painful to watch, not to mention that all four characters seem to be clinical sociopaths with zero bad feelings about doing things that any sane, civilized human being would feel extremely uneasy partaking in. And what the what was there, at the very end? I won't include any spoilers, but... seriously?
I can't say I expected it to be a masterpiece like the original film, but I didn't expect it to be so bad. Please drop the idea of another film or a TV series.
It's very hard to believe Holocene was created by the same people. The script, the casting - everything is so much worse. Acting by the four kids is just painful to watch, not to mention that all four characters seem to be clinical sociopaths with zero bad feelings about doing things that any sane, civilized human being would feel extremely uneasy partaking in. And what the what was there, at the very end? I won't include any spoilers, but... seriously?
I can't say I expected it to be a masterpiece like the original film, but I didn't expect it to be so bad. Please drop the idea of another film or a TV series.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThe film was released on file sharing sites by the director Richard Schenkman, who stated, "In order to make sure that every single person in the world who wants to see the movie has access to stream or download it, we are uploading it ourselves to the filesharing community."
- ErroresWhile there can be "75-year-old Scotch", whiskey including Scotch varieties only age in the barrel and once bottled that age is set. So, if you have a 12-year-old malt it will always be 12 years old, even if you keep it for 75, 750 or 7500 years. A 75-year-old Scotch would be an extremely rare and exotic find, not something you would be likely to find at a garage sale.
- Créditos curiososAfter the first credits with cave drawings, there is an additional scene that involves Arthur Jenkins and an FBI agent.
- ConexionesFollows The Man from Earth (2007)
- Bandas sonorasWhat Does It All Mean
Written by Jon Cooper
Publishing: One Two Many Songs Ltd
Performed by Turtle
Courtesy of the Artist
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- How long is The Man from Earth: Holocene?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- USD 300,000 (estimado)
- Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 5,472
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 3,100
- 15 oct 2017
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 5,472
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h 38min(98 min)
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.78 : 1
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