Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueRock star makes directorial debut playing a musician who returns to Indiana seeking normalcy but repeats old patterns, pursuing a former flame while neglecting his wife, mirroring his father... Tout lireRock star makes directorial debut playing a musician who returns to Indiana seeking normalcy but repeats old patterns, pursuing a former flame while neglecting his wife, mirroring his father's behavior.Rock star makes directorial debut playing a musician who returns to Indiana seeking normalcy but repeats old patterns, pursuing a former flame while neglecting his wife, mirroring his father's behavior.
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So so. Couple fine performances from Kay Lenz as a small town tramp and Claude Akins as the mother of all despicable dads helps to elevate this meandering, overly talky film (de rigeur when you ask a great novelist to write the screenplay) slightly above the mediocrity bar. Big problem for me is that I just never bought the basic premise, that a well known country singer would throw over a loving marriage and a successful career to go back home to Doak City Indiana and marry his jilted high school sweetheart. Second biggest problem was John Mellenkamp's dull acting which sure as hell isn't going to get un dull if you're directing yourself. Third biggest problem was scenarist and veteran Texan Larry McMurtry making his Indiana middle border folks sound like they all wandered in from Archer City. Give it a C plus. PS...Nice location shooting in Hoosier country and a good country soundtrack also aid in making the story somewhat digestible.
This was a po' boys "Pure Country". Looks like Mellencamp decided to make a movie around the time his buddy George Strait did. The result, unfortunately, was a boring look at small town America where the folks act a lot like their big city brethren. It was just a big yawn concerning husband and wife problems, with Mellencamp continually pushing his lank hair off his rather apish forehead. The boy needs to stick with what he is good at, whatever that is - it sure isn't singing.
This one was OK, more on the lines of a good made for TV movie than anything else. It was great to see Dub Taylor and Claude Akins working together one last time, though I got a kick outta their being father/son, Dub was born in '07 and Sheriff Lobo there 11 years lator.
Wonder what they thought about being directed by a rock singer? Oh well.
The film is okay for what it is, Mellencamp plays himself(gone country), not too terribly but is def. no actor. He hangs around the small town homestead, gets in a bar fight with Sheriff Lobo(dad), shoots of a gun or three, messes around with old flame Kay Lenz and drives wife Mariel Hemingway nuts. He talks about coming back to stay and his cronies say 'go back, you don't belong here, you got out, we don't want you here', more or less.
And there is a stunt involving riding in a cage of sorts in the back of a truck, kicking it off the back and watching Mellencamp go richocheting around the pavement behind said truck, caught in the bashed in cage and brush. He winds up in the hospital.
Some critics loved this-Siskel and Ebert, for example, and Peter Travers of Rolling Stone. Boston Globe thought it was okay too. Lyons, Medved and Maltin all hated it.
I sorta liked it, as a big Mellencamp fan-and will give it ** for Mellencamps decent direction and seeing Akins/Dub one last time. But the rest is only so so. Okay music too.
Wonder what they thought about being directed by a rock singer? Oh well.
The film is okay for what it is, Mellencamp plays himself(gone country), not too terribly but is def. no actor. He hangs around the small town homestead, gets in a bar fight with Sheriff Lobo(dad), shoots of a gun or three, messes around with old flame Kay Lenz and drives wife Mariel Hemingway nuts. He talks about coming back to stay and his cronies say 'go back, you don't belong here, you got out, we don't want you here', more or less.
And there is a stunt involving riding in a cage of sorts in the back of a truck, kicking it off the back and watching Mellencamp go richocheting around the pavement behind said truck, caught in the bashed in cage and brush. He winds up in the hospital.
Some critics loved this-Siskel and Ebert, for example, and Peter Travers of Rolling Stone. Boston Globe thought it was okay too. Lyons, Medved and Maltin all hated it.
I sorta liked it, as a big Mellencamp fan-and will give it ** for Mellencamps decent direction and seeing Akins/Dub one last time. But the rest is only so so. Okay music too.
John Mellencamp debuts as star and director in this feature about a country-western star who returns to his home in Indiana. He's tired of the grind of performing, tired of Los Angeles, and hopes to reconnect with roots, but discovers that you can't go home again.
It's a decent little movie, low-key in its performances, with Mellencamp working off a script by Larry McMurtry, and with a good cast that includes Mariel Hemingway, Dub Taylor, Kay Lenz and Claude Akins. Mellencamp doesn't sing, but he gives a solid performance.
It's a decent little movie, low-key in its performances, with Mellencamp working off a script by Larry McMurtry, and with a good cast that includes Mariel Hemingway, Dub Taylor, Kay Lenz and Claude Akins. Mellencamp doesn't sing, but he gives a solid performance.
This is a reasonably strong directorial debut for rocker Mellencamp, who also gives a good lead performance. In fact, the whole cast is quite effective, and the story moves along at an appropriate pace. Personally, I found the final scenes to be rather weak compared to the rest of the film, but even with the poor ending, I still found this to be a solid effort and a generally good movie.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesJohn Mellencamp was from Seymour, Indiana. Co-star Claude Akins, who plays his father, was raised in Bedford, Indiana.
- Citations
Alice Parks: You can't have some secret world in your mind and another one on the street.
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- How long is Falling from Grace?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 3 000 000 $ US (estimation)
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 231 826 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 49 708 $ US
- 23 févr. 1992
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 231 826 $ US
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By what name was Falling from Grace (1992) officially released in Canada in English?
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