Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueFollows a young surfer as he has to deal with the grief of his father's death.Follows a young surfer as he has to deal with the grief of his father's death.Follows a young surfer as he has to deal with the grief of his father's death.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 1 nomination au total
Barton C. Williams
- Vayton
- (as Barton Williams)
Avis à la une
I feel I must have been watching another film than other reviewers, as I saw a beautifully filmed tale about a young boy dealing with the tragedy of his father's death and his friend's crisis of confidence in a place she loves and feels safe but, like many, must leave to fulfil her potential.
Together, through conquering the sea's challenges, they find their own way of mourning what is past and accepting what the future holds.
Featuring two very good rising stars, this witty and charming film captures the all too fragile people and environment of remote island way of life in an enchanting and unexpectedly uplifting way.
Together, through conquering the sea's challenges, they find their own way of mourning what is past and accepting what the future holds.
Featuring two very good rising stars, this witty and charming film captures the all too fragile people and environment of remote island way of life in an enchanting and unexpectedly uplifting way.
There is certainly some beautiful photography of the Hebrides here, but otherwise the film seems uncertain as to what it's trying to do. It follows the tale of the young "Dondo" (Louis McCartney) who lives with his mum (Victoria Belnaves) as both come to terms with an anniversary. It's not a joyous one, though, as his dad has been lost at sea and the youngster refuses to believe the worst. With much of the ensuing storyline blurred between his actual existence and a more imaginary - or idealistic - one in which his love of surfing and a new-found faith in God prevail, the plot tries to understand a little about how "Dondo" deals with an incomplete grieving process. Meantime, he has hormones too as does neighbour "Sas" (Ella Lily Hyland) and though neither acknowledges their attraction, their friendship does start to help him to focus. That focus is brought to an head when his mum decides that she needs some sort of closure in the form of a memorial to be led by their local pastor "Paddy" (Mark Lockyer). At times it is quite a poignant study of just how difficult it can be to come to terms with tragedy when there are no concrete terms of reference to anchor those feelings of loneliness and isolation, but I think a lot of that emanates from the audience's own sympathies for an engagingly portrayed character rather than because auteur Jonny Barrington has written or directed anything that imposes on us. Indeed, the whole film relies too heavily on the scenery, a little dark humour and lots of assumptions to sell itself and I'm afraid I found that - and the teenage angst relationship sub-plot - just a bit underwhelming. It's a good starting point to tell the story, but in the end is incomplete as the dilemma facing "Dondo".
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Détails
- Durée1 heure 30 minutes
- Couleur
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