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6.6/10
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En esta conmovedora historia de identidad, un estudiante de 17 años se ve obligado a dejar de lado la valla en la que ha participado activamente toda su vida para defenderse a sí mismo, a su... Leer todoEn esta conmovedora historia de identidad, un estudiante de 17 años se ve obligado a dejar de lado la valla en la que ha participado activamente toda su vida para defenderse a sí mismo, a su whanau (familia) y a su futuro.En esta conmovedora historia de identidad, un estudiante de 17 años se ve obligado a dejar de lado la valla en la que ha participado activamente toda su vida para defenderse a sí mismo, a su whanau (familia) y a su futuro.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Premios
- 2 premios ganados y 3 nominaciones en total
Opiniones destacadas
The thing I like most about New Zealanders is ironically the reason we are very bad at making movies. We are a very safe and non-daring people, and so our movies always come across this way. You never get a moment that drops your jaw or takes you off-guard. You always get exactly what you expect from start to finish and that is no different in 'Uproar'. A remarkably forgettable film.
The only thing I found to connect with in this movie was Rhys Darby. Both his character and his performance were terrific. He gave me 'Dead Poet's Society' Robin Williams vibes. If they ever wanted to do a spin-off movie about his character I'd be first in line to see that.
Otherwise though, the film just doesn't work. It isn't funny and so doesn't have that to pave over the cracks. And the story doesn't have the emotional impact, or even close to it, that it would've needed for the film to work. 4/10.
The only thing I found to connect with in this movie was Rhys Darby. Both his character and his performance were terrific. He gave me 'Dead Poet's Society' Robin Williams vibes. If they ever wanted to do a spin-off movie about his character I'd be first in line to see that.
Otherwise though, the film just doesn't work. It isn't funny and so doesn't have that to pave over the cracks. And the story doesn't have the emotional impact, or even close to it, that it would've needed for the film to work. 4/10.
Initially I went to watch this movie with the point of view of what it was like being a minority race in that time and if it still correlates to today. The short answer is yes, it's an unseen underbelly in todays New Zealand but behind closed doors and even in pockets of social media platforms you get the gist that people although not all still have something against the minority race. I'm Maori, an indeginous (yet soon may not be) New Zealander and everything in this movie hit and resonated with me and that ultimate question who am I could not have been writ better, it hit hard, I cried I laughed, an angry voice finally heard, this movie done this for me. I felt eyes looking at me as I walked of the cinema, looking at me in a different light as if this shed light on what it's like being Maori colonized by a western view point. This movie had some wit to it like it's characters and I can only imagine that entire ensemble were all on board and the direction and storyline and within it the subtle storytelling to give this movie the best shot all aligned. Julian Chur my maori, made me cry bloody bugger 😂
A beautiful commentary on Aotearoa New Zealand in the early 80s, and a moving coming of age story. I laughed and cried, and recommended it to everyone I know.
Julian Dennison is brilliant as the lead character Josh, supported by excellent performances from Erana James, Minnie Driver, Rhys Darby and Mark Mitchinson, among others. Wonderful direction from Hamish Bennett and Paul Middleditch, and I particularly appreciated the authentic and powerful depiction of Maori culture. The haka scene during the protest was amazing.
There was an audible positive response to this film, lots of laughs and gasps throughout, and animated chatting afterwards, always a great sign of a happy audience.
Loved it!
Julian Dennison is brilliant as the lead character Josh, supported by excellent performances from Erana James, Minnie Driver, Rhys Darby and Mark Mitchinson, among others. Wonderful direction from Hamish Bennett and Paul Middleditch, and I particularly appreciated the authentic and powerful depiction of Maori culture. The haka scene during the protest was amazing.
There was an audible positive response to this film, lots of laughs and gasps throughout, and animated chatting afterwards, always a great sign of a happy audience.
Loved it!
In '80s-based NZ drama "Uproar" half-Maori teen Julian Dennison (great) struggles both at his mainly white school and at home where Brit mum Minnie Driver fights to keep the family afloat after her Maori hubbie's death and older bro James Rolleston pines a rugger career crushed by injury. Through teacher Rhys Darby (good) Dennison naturally exels at drama (set against the rugger he has to play) while in backdrop South Africa's NZ rugger tour stokes racial tensions that bite home via the likes of Dennison's pal Jada Fa'atui. Co-director (with Paul Misdleditch) Hamish Bennett and co-writer Sonia Whiteman pack plenty in, but it works. It's a terrific movie.
10FastRita
Beautifully written and directed with a light, deft touch that allow all the actors have space to be real. Julian Dennison holds the film together with terrific support from James Rolleston and Craig Hall. Minnie Driver delivers a subtle performance to remind us she's still out there with Star power.
The Indigenous themes set against the Springbok tour of 1984 are generous and heartfelt.
But it's the family themes, answering the question, "What are you," that resonate. Loving and holding it all together while letting go. Quite the tightrope to walk.
Watch it. A joy to spend time with a film that's about life as it's lived, and not clickbait fiction.
The Indigenous themes set against the Springbok tour of 1984 are generous and heartfelt.
But it's the family themes, answering the question, "What are you," that resonate. Loving and holding it all together while letting go. Quite the tightrope to walk.
Watch it. A joy to spend time with a film that's about life as it's lived, and not clickbait fiction.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThe story is loosely based on writer/director Paul Middletech's experiences growing up in Wellington, the capital city of New Zealand, during the 80's.
- ErroresA Handicam is shown being used, but these weren't sold until 3 years after the movie is set.
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- How long is Uproar?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- NZD 7,000,000 (estimado)
- Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 26,316
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 8,855
- 17 mar 2024
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 768,664
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 50 minutos
- Color
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What is the Canadian French language plot outline for Uproar (2023)?
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