CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.5/10
3.1 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Una ex combatiente de Afganistán mantiene una misteriosa relación con su mejor amigo del ejército, ya fallecido, y se enfrenta a su abuelo, veterano de Vietnam, en la ancestral casa familiar... Leer todoUna ex combatiente de Afganistán mantiene una misteriosa relación con su mejor amigo del ejército, ya fallecido, y se enfrenta a su abuelo, veterano de Vietnam, en la ancestral casa familiar del lago.Una ex combatiente de Afganistán mantiene una misteriosa relación con su mejor amigo del ejército, ya fallecido, y se enfrenta a su abuelo, veterano de Vietnam, en la ancestral casa familiar del lago.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Premios
- 7 premios ganados y 3 nominaciones en total
Opiniones destacadas
Soooo...I went to see this film at AMC's Scream Unseen, which is exclusively for horror flicks. So that was upsetting, this home is absolutely not horror in any way shape or form. Secondly, since it was an early release the director begins the film with telling you about his newest dark comedy. This is assuredly not a dark comedy or even funny at any point. With that out of the way, this is a film about and for veterans and addressing the higher suicide rate of those who have served our country. Of course this is an important topic and I appreciate the directors and writers who made the film. Unfortunately there isn't much here till about 70 minutes into the film. More of a slice of life that happens to have veterans in the film. I would wait to stream this film. Not really worth a romp to the theatre.
It's 2016 Afghanistan. Merit (Sonequa Martin-Green) and Zoe (Natalie Morales) are best friends in the Army. Some years later, Merit is in court-mandated group therapy headed by Dr. Cole (Morgan Freeman). She is talking to her dead friend Zoe. Her grandfather Dale (Ed Harris) has wandered away from home due to his early Alzheimer's.
This is inspired by a true story and probably speaks to a lot of military people's personal experiences. It also has some great actors here. As a story, it needs a destination. It needs a definite goal for Merit. There could have been a couple of possibilities. This could be a road trip where Merit tracks down her grandfather and she has to bring him home. Along the way, the car could break down. They could pick up a military hitchhiker. The movie is a bit aimless. Maybe that fits for someone suffering PTSD.
This is inspired by a true story and probably speaks to a lot of military people's personal experiences. It also has some great actors here. As a story, it needs a destination. It needs a definite goal for Merit. There could have been a couple of possibilities. This could be a road trip where Merit tracks down her grandfather and she has to bring him home. Along the way, the car could break down. They could pick up a military hitchhiker. The movie is a bit aimless. Maybe that fits for someone suffering PTSD.
This movie is absolutely positively not
even in the slightest bit a comedy or a dark comedy. It is incredibly sad. And very boring for the first 55 minutes (i fell asleep multiple times, i never do that). That being said, the movie recruits real veterans to play the roles of the veterans in the support group. The movie as a whole shines a light on some incredibly important (and often forgotten/overlooked) topics. I cried for the last 1/3 of the movie. Veteran or not, anyone who suffers from PTSD/SI, or even knows
someone who does, will relate to this movie. And if that's not you, you'll still most likely appreciate the significance of the themes in this film. I'd categorize this movie as (in this order): drama, tragedy, war.
Throughout this movie I felt there was something missing or wrong with the entire premise or story line.
After some time thinking things over and re-watching the movie, I think I know what it is: It really shouldn't be a comedy.
The subject matter is important and I think it would have been much more effective had the movie been entirely dramatic.
The story of a multi-generational military family - having made sacrifices for the country at great personal cost - should be told with more seriousness.
I do understand the artistic choice to use an imaginary dead friend as a story device. But I think it could have been done well even without the comedy.
Still, the acting was very good. And I'm glad Sonequa Martin-Green got to be lead in a movie that has nothing to do with Star Trek.
After some time thinking things over and re-watching the movie, I think I know what it is: It really shouldn't be a comedy.
The subject matter is important and I think it would have been much more effective had the movie been entirely dramatic.
The story of a multi-generational military family - having made sacrifices for the country at great personal cost - should be told with more seriousness.
I do understand the artistic choice to use an imaginary dead friend as a story device. But I think it could have been done well even without the comedy.
Still, the acting was very good. And I'm glad Sonequa Martin-Green got to be lead in a movie that has nothing to do with Star Trek.
While I can understand why some might have a real connection to this movie and rate it a 10 for that reason (ie you served in the military (thank you for your service), lost someone close to you, or had to deal with putting an elderly family member in an assisted living home against their will), this movie isn't an Oscar worthy film. At the same time it isn't a "1" , worth walking out on, not by a long shot.
Like many I saw this movie as it was playing as the Screen Unseen, Monday movie of the week (love this idea by the way). The script is ok, not terribly deep or thought provoking. There are some cute, funny moments scattered about, but not sure I'd put this in the dark comedy category.
Morgan Freeman isn't used very effectively as some scenes cried out for more interaction between him and the lead character. Without that character depth, anyone could have played that role as meaningfully as he did, which wasn't very.
The ending could have used a little more fleshing out of some details to really deliver. It wasn't bad, and it gets its point across just fine. But overall that's what this movie is, it's just there and it's just fine. That's not a terrible thing, but it's not an amazing thing either.
That said, I am glad I saw it and I enjoyed it.
Like many I saw this movie as it was playing as the Screen Unseen, Monday movie of the week (love this idea by the way). The script is ok, not terribly deep or thought provoking. There are some cute, funny moments scattered about, but not sure I'd put this in the dark comedy category.
Morgan Freeman isn't used very effectively as some scenes cried out for more interaction between him and the lead character. Without that character depth, anyone could have played that role as meaningfully as he did, which wasn't very.
The ending could have used a little more fleshing out of some details to really deliver. It wasn't bad, and it gets its point across just fine. But overall that's what this movie is, it's just there and it's just fine. That's not a terrible thing, but it's not an amazing thing either.
That said, I am glad I saw it and I enjoyed it.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaLake scenes & accompanying cabin are filmed at Deardorff Reservoir in Molalla, Oregon
- ConexionesFeatures M.A.S.H. (1972)
- Bandas sonorasUmbrella
Written by Jay-Z (as Shawn Carter), The-Dream (as Terius Gesteelde-Diamant), Kuk Harrell (as Thaddis Harrell), & Christopher Stewart
Performed by Rihanna featuring Jay-Z
Courtesy of Def Jam Records under license from Universal Music Enterprises
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Detalles
Taquilla
- Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 1,250,703
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 740,088
- 2 mar 2025
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 1,265,163
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h 43min(103 min)
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.39:1
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