Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaThe tale of a Hollywood-bound actor called Lucky whose shoplifting is discovered by a local girl in a small, Midwestern town.The tale of a Hollywood-bound actor called Lucky whose shoplifting is discovered by a local girl in a small, Midwestern town.The tale of a Hollywood-bound actor called Lucky whose shoplifting is discovered by a local girl in a small, Midwestern town.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Premi
- 2 vittorie e 3 candidature totali
Recensioni in evidenza
Easy, breezy indy 'road' flick taking place in small town, USA. The title being metaphorical.
Well written with actors giving dead on performances. After first viewing and feeling full 'n satisfied I made a second run through Kwik Stop and worshiped the dialog. Tightly written and delivered invoking awe, in each scene, of the direction. Yet the film does not hem itself in as the very last scene invokes a theme from earlier that blows open the possibilities of the final three characters. With rumination, I like the ending more and more; realizing the screenwriter's almost dare to the viewer.
Yes it is, yet another youth 'learning and growing' distopian tale that have been coming so frequently of late, and seem to be the 'fast ticket' to Sundance/Hollywood (thank god for p2p). In this style, the lyrics of each song fills in the natural voids of communication between the proto-typical teens, and does this well.
There is little to no violence or nudity, shocking or otherwise, to stir up inflated buzz. This results in Kwik Stop having to be judged on more quaint qualities where it smacks the 'brown bunny' with 'love and a 45'. (The bunny 45 thing is a reference to the film's peers and are not in Kwik Stop.)
Well written with actors giving dead on performances. After first viewing and feeling full 'n satisfied I made a second run through Kwik Stop and worshiped the dialog. Tightly written and delivered invoking awe, in each scene, of the direction. Yet the film does not hem itself in as the very last scene invokes a theme from earlier that blows open the possibilities of the final three characters. With rumination, I like the ending more and more; realizing the screenwriter's almost dare to the viewer.
Yes it is, yet another youth 'learning and growing' distopian tale that have been coming so frequently of late, and seem to be the 'fast ticket' to Sundance/Hollywood (thank god for p2p). In this style, the lyrics of each song fills in the natural voids of communication between the proto-typical teens, and does this well.
There is little to no violence or nudity, shocking or otherwise, to stir up inflated buzz. This results in Kwik Stop having to be judged on more quaint qualities where it smacks the 'brown bunny' with 'love and a 45'. (The bunny 45 thing is a reference to the film's peers and are not in Kwik Stop.)
I just saw this film at the St. Louis Int'l Film Festival, and it may be my favorite film of the year. Kwik Stop has some of the smartest dialogue I've ever heard, in the service of an unusually honest love-on-the-run story. The perfomances are outstanding too. This is a major, major find.
At first glance, this film looks and feels like your typical low-budget, independent comedy-drama. It has the same kinds of characters, the same production quality, bad lighting, and amateur acting. But at some point it starts to feel like real life in a way that we're not used to seeing in this kind of movie. We may resist it at first, being unprepared for it, but can only hold out for so long. And in that way, it stands out from all the others.
At times—especially toward the beginning—Kwik Stop feels a bit like Kevin Smith's Clerks. It has the same kind of dialogue and the same independent charm. But while Kevin Smith went on after Clerks to become a hugely successful director of big-budget films, Kwik Stop conquers the independent realm in a way that Kevin Smith could never do, albeit in a purely artistic aspect. Unfortunately, I get the feeling that it was never quite so successful on a monetary level, and director Michael Gilio never went on to make another film.
Kwik Stop feels like someone watched Clerks and said, "People actually like this movie? I can make a better film with the same amount of money." It has the same charming quality and witty dialogue from Clerks and, similarly, it makes use of the same kinds of cheap, available locations. But it also has a great, unpredictable and completely believable story that is different from anything we're used to seeing. It's as if the filmmakers realized that what they would lose out on due to the low budget they could make up for through excellent storytelling. They invested in that and it paid off. Unlike other independent films, Kwik Stop doesn't waste too much time on silly comedy or sappy romance. It ignores those tired ideas, proving that the filmmakers were confident enough in their own ideas to take a chance on them. It feels like real life in such a way that I'm unable to think of any film worthy of comparison. And while there are comedy and romance throughout the film, is still always feels totally real. It feels real even despite the bad acting, because the events and the things happening to the characters feel so genuine and unrehearsed.
The film's main weakness is the acting, which is to be expected in such a low budget movie. The acting isn't exactly terrible. It's actually pretty good at times, but pretty bad at others. Most notably, the leading man played by director Michael Gilio delivers the majority of his lines pretty badly. He feels miscast. He's trying to play a part that his face and his voice and his overall demeanor can't quite pull off. It's a bit ironic, as there's a scene in this film in which his character watches a movie and then talks about how one of the leads in that film was miscast.
The only other drawback I found in this film was its length. At almost two hours, it felt a bit long for the story it was telling. One thing I like about most of these independent films is that they tend to wrap things up pretty quickly and rarely drag on past the hour-and-a-half mark.
Overall, I enjoyed Kwik Stop quite a bit. It's not the best film I've seen lately, but it's certainly the best of its kind. It tells a story that's new and different than what we're used to, and it pulls off what it does better than any other low budget film.
At times—especially toward the beginning—Kwik Stop feels a bit like Kevin Smith's Clerks. It has the same kind of dialogue and the same independent charm. But while Kevin Smith went on after Clerks to become a hugely successful director of big-budget films, Kwik Stop conquers the independent realm in a way that Kevin Smith could never do, albeit in a purely artistic aspect. Unfortunately, I get the feeling that it was never quite so successful on a monetary level, and director Michael Gilio never went on to make another film.
Kwik Stop feels like someone watched Clerks and said, "People actually like this movie? I can make a better film with the same amount of money." It has the same charming quality and witty dialogue from Clerks and, similarly, it makes use of the same kinds of cheap, available locations. But it also has a great, unpredictable and completely believable story that is different from anything we're used to seeing. It's as if the filmmakers realized that what they would lose out on due to the low budget they could make up for through excellent storytelling. They invested in that and it paid off. Unlike other independent films, Kwik Stop doesn't waste too much time on silly comedy or sappy romance. It ignores those tired ideas, proving that the filmmakers were confident enough in their own ideas to take a chance on them. It feels like real life in such a way that I'm unable to think of any film worthy of comparison. And while there are comedy and romance throughout the film, is still always feels totally real. It feels real even despite the bad acting, because the events and the things happening to the characters feel so genuine and unrehearsed.
The film's main weakness is the acting, which is to be expected in such a low budget movie. The acting isn't exactly terrible. It's actually pretty good at times, but pretty bad at others. Most notably, the leading man played by director Michael Gilio delivers the majority of his lines pretty badly. He feels miscast. He's trying to play a part that his face and his voice and his overall demeanor can't quite pull off. It's a bit ironic, as there's a scene in this film in which his character watches a movie and then talks about how one of the leads in that film was miscast.
The only other drawback I found in this film was its length. At almost two hours, it felt a bit long for the story it was telling. One thing I like about most of these independent films is that they tend to wrap things up pretty quickly and rarely drag on past the hour-and-a-half mark.
Overall, I enjoyed Kwik Stop quite a bit. It's not the best film I've seen lately, but it's certainly the best of its kind. It tells a story that's new and different than what we're used to, and it pulls off what it does better than any other low budget film.
I really liked this movie. Seemed like a regular indie movie about self-centered young adults, but really became something else. The movie quickly runs away with itself. I just read the Ebert review. He said Kwikstop "follows its characters where they insist on going". I agree with him that this is what makes the movie surprising and fun.
It is curious too how the characters "grow up" during the movie. In a way the film-making and acting also mature as the film continues. It goes from quick and self-conscious in the acting and camera-work to long static jim-jarmusch (stranger than paradise) like shots and virtuoso performances. It is really strange. By the end you feel like you are in a different film altogether. I had that feeling of inevitability watching the characters struggle that all good fiction gives me.
Also there is a monologue in this by the character Emil (Rich Komenich) that I have just watched a hundred times. Totally gives me chills every time. Just brilliant.
I would totally see more movies by these people.
It is curious too how the characters "grow up" during the movie. In a way the film-making and acting also mature as the film continues. It goes from quick and self-conscious in the acting and camera-work to long static jim-jarmusch (stranger than paradise) like shots and virtuoso performances. It is really strange. By the end you feel like you are in a different film altogether. I had that feeling of inevitability watching the characters struggle that all good fiction gives me.
Also there is a monologue in this by the character Emil (Rich Komenich) that I have just watched a hundred times. Totally gives me chills every time. Just brilliant.
I would totally see more movies by these people.
A wonderful little independent film. I had the chance to see this at SXSW in 2002.
Kwik Stop starts out like your normal Boy Meets Girl, boy and girl go on road trip, boy and girl get into trouble type film. It quickly leaves that genre however and ends up in some completely other place.
It bounces from comedy to melodrama about half way through. All of the performances are wonderful and the writing is good (if not at all times believable). Some of the dialogue was a bit too over the top for my tastes and the ending had me asking "why". I think had this film stayed more light-hearted I would have liked it more. But for the Writer/Director's first effort it was well worth seeing!
Kwik Stop starts out like your normal Boy Meets Girl, boy and girl go on road trip, boy and girl get into trouble type film. It quickly leaves that genre however and ends up in some completely other place.
It bounces from comedy to melodrama about half way through. All of the performances are wonderful and the writing is good (if not at all times believable). Some of the dialogue was a bit too over the top for my tastes and the ending had me asking "why". I think had this film stayed more light-hearted I would have liked it more. But for the Writer/Director's first effort it was well worth seeing!
Lo sapevi?
- ConnessioniReferences Quarto potere (1941)
I più visti
Accedi per valutare e creare un elenco di titoli salvati per ottenere consigli personalizzati
Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- 反艺术狂热分子
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Azienda produttrice
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 50min(110 min)
- Colore
Contribuisci a questa pagina
Suggerisci una modifica o aggiungi i contenuti mancanti