VALUTAZIONE IMDb
5,6/10
2583
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaA single mom caught up in the Florida drug trade during the late 1970s tries to make a better life for her two girls.A single mom caught up in the Florida drug trade during the late 1970s tries to make a better life for her two girls.A single mom caught up in the Florida drug trade during the late 1970s tries to make a better life for her two girls.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Premi
- 1 vittoria in totale
Daniella Garcia
- Zada
- (as Daniella Garcia-Lorido)
Kyle T. Heffner
- Messenger
- (as Kyle Heffner)
- …
Vincent Foster
- Captain Jim
- (as VJ Foster)
Michael Coveduck Noland
- Neighbor Boy
- (as Michael Coveduck)
Yvette Yates Redick
- Gia
- (as Yvette Yates)
Recensioni in evidenza
It's 1977. Christina Willand (Anna Paquin) escapes her abusive partner taking her daughters MJ (Liana Liberato) and Shell (Ava Acres) from Barberton, Ohio to Sandy (Drea de Matteo) in Florida. Christina gets a job cleaning mansions. Sandy gets her involved dealing with Ray (Cam Gigandet) and the Bossman. They are soon transporting large amounts of drugs. The family is given a house to live in while the Bossman stores drugs in the barn.
I think this movie is set up for something better. Instead, the story just lays there without sustained drama. It's a bit random and disjointed. Christina as a character doesn't change enough to be compelling. This may be better off as a movie about MJ and her relationship with her mother. Her character changes much more from telling her little sister to come clean about stealing gum to dealing with her drug transporting mom to falling into troubled herself. She's traveling a more compelling journey. I also don't understand why they wouldn't dramatize the climatic crash with Sandy instead of the new character Rain. This is supposedly director/writer Shana Betz's real life as the character Shell and maybe she didn't fictionalize the story enough. She needs to rewrite this with an eye towards making a compelling story.
I think this movie is set up for something better. Instead, the story just lays there without sustained drama. It's a bit random and disjointed. Christina as a character doesn't change enough to be compelling. This may be better off as a movie about MJ and her relationship with her mother. Her character changes much more from telling her little sister to come clean about stealing gum to dealing with her drug transporting mom to falling into troubled herself. She's traveling a more compelling journey. I also don't understand why they wouldn't dramatize the climatic crash with Sandy instead of the new character Rain. This is supposedly director/writer Shana Betz's real life as the character Shell and maybe she didn't fictionalize the story enough. She needs to rewrite this with an eye towards making a compelling story.
"We should have never left Ohio." Christina (Paquin) is a single mother looking to start a new and better life for her two daughters MJ (Liberato) and Shell. They move to Florida and meet up with Sandy who introduces Christina to the world of drug trafficking. What starts off as a way to make some quick money on the side for her kids soon spirals out of control and changes the lives of all involved. I will start by saying that this isn't an original idea but the fact that this one is based on a true story makes it seem fresh. The acting is very good in this and there are just enough different story lines going on to keep you interested and make the movie tense. The mom trying to avoid the law, the tension between the mom and the oldest daughter, and the love interest lines keep you watching and wondering what will happen next. We see Christina go from a great mom to an absentee mom fairly quickly and the same arc for MJ really made me like the movie more then I expected too. Overall, there really isn't much else to say about this, pretty cookie cutter and predictable but it is a true story so that fact alone makes it more interesting. I give it a B.
Anna Paquin leads a very competent cast to portray Christina, a mother of two who flees an abusive relationship. She heads south into an ever increasing storm of drug influenced business - as their lives become paradoxically easier and more difficult at the same time.
The lead roles are compelling, with Paquin showing moments of superior skill, proving that her Oscar from 1993 was no fluke.
As it's a true story, the story line is a series of dramatized facts, woven together in a nearly challenging way.
The attention to 1970s set, wardrobe and script (a Walton's reference!) was superb - throwing my head space back into my own 1970s childhood a number of times.
The movie could have been preachy, but wasn't - it instead conveys the practical necessities that sometimes cloud choices. Christina was confronted with truly desperate situation, and we are left to consider the magnitude of that in a world more sexist than today.
I was left with the sense that this movie entirely escapes the worst of Hollywood, rather it has an Indie feel to it that I found enjoyable.
The lead roles are compelling, with Paquin showing moments of superior skill, proving that her Oscar from 1993 was no fluke.
As it's a true story, the story line is a series of dramatized facts, woven together in a nearly challenging way.
The attention to 1970s set, wardrobe and script (a Walton's reference!) was superb - throwing my head space back into my own 1970s childhood a number of times.
The movie could have been preachy, but wasn't - it instead conveys the practical necessities that sometimes cloud choices. Christina was confronted with truly desperate situation, and we are left to consider the magnitude of that in a world more sexist than today.
I was left with the sense that this movie entirely escapes the worst of Hollywood, rather it has an Indie feel to it that I found enjoyable.
Watched this last night. I don't know why sandcrab gave it a zero. Maybe they were offended by the marijuana storylines. They said the movie glorified drug use. It was set in 77. I'm pretty sure that was going on back then. Especially the weed trade down in Florida. It was a basic movie supposedly based on actual events. The ending credits show some of the people involved. Were there plot holes? Sure, but to trash it because it glorified drugs, gtfoh.
This must be the most boring drug trafficking movie ever made. True, it is supposed to be following real life, which often lacks drama, but it also follows the tired script of unfortunate single mothers making bad choices, told from the perspective of their amazing daughters, so it's not really educative either. It's unclear if the script is poorly researched and light on facts, or if these drug smugglers just lead empty lives, but the whole thing has a thin TV atmosphere. The most dramatic scene is when the little girl is attacked by ants (I won't spoil it for by revealing her fate). The film itself is made well enough, and Anna Paquin looks good lounging on a boat, but the only thing I cared about was getting to the end of this pretty homage to frivolous crime.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizAlthough the movie is supposed to take place in the late '70s, in two of the bar scenes "Say Goodnight to the World" by Dax Riggs, released in 2010, can be heard playing in the background.
- BlooperModern pull-tabs on beer cans in scenes set in the late '70s, several years before they were designed and implemented.
- ConnessioniReferences Una famiglia americana (1972)
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- Çocuklarım İçin
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Venice, Florida, Stati Uniti(Location: Various throughout area)
- Aziende produttrici
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 26min(86 min)
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.85 : 1
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