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IMDbPro

Palo Alto

  • 2013
  • R
  • 1h 40min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,2/10
32.728
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Emma Roberts in Palo Alto (2013)
Trailer for Palo Alto
Riproduci trailer1: 47
11 video
99+ foto
Coming-of-AgeDrama

Un ritratto incrollabile di lussuria adolescenziale, noia e autodistruzione, incentrato su una ragazza timida all'apice di una relazione illecita con il suo allenatore di calcio.Un ritratto incrollabile di lussuria adolescenziale, noia e autodistruzione, incentrato su una ragazza timida all'apice di una relazione illecita con il suo allenatore di calcio.Un ritratto incrollabile di lussuria adolescenziale, noia e autodistruzione, incentrato su una ragazza timida all'apice di una relazione illecita con il suo allenatore di calcio.

  • Regia
    • Gia Coppola
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Gia Coppola
    • James Franco
  • Star
    • Emma Roberts
    • James Franco
    • Jack Kilmer
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    6,2/10
    32.728
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Gia Coppola
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Gia Coppola
      • James Franco
    • Star
      • Emma Roberts
      • James Franco
      • Jack Kilmer
    • 89Recensioni degli utenti
    • 121Recensioni della critica
    • 69Metascore
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 4 candidature totali

    Video11

    Palo Alto
    Trailer 1:47
    Palo Alto
    Palo Alto
    Trailer 1:48
    Palo Alto
    Palo Alto
    Trailer 1:48
    Palo Alto
    Palo Alto
    Trailer 1:47
    Palo Alto
    Palo Alto: There's Always A Reason
    Clip 1:15
    Palo Alto: There's Always A Reason
    Palo Alto: Is Everything Okay? (French Subtitled)
    Clip 1:05
    Palo Alto: Is Everything Okay? (French Subtitled)
    Palo Alto: Don't Get Stuck In There
    Clip 1:03
    Palo Alto: Don't Get Stuck In There

    Foto144

    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
    + 140
    Visualizza poster

    Interpreti principali46

    Modifica
    Emma Roberts
    Emma Roberts
    • April
    James Franco
    James Franco
    • Mr. B
    Jack Kilmer
    Jack Kilmer
    • Teddy
    Zoe Levin
    Zoe Levin
    • Emily
    Nat Wolff
    Nat Wolff
    • Fred
    Olivia Crocicchia
    Olivia Crocicchia
    • Chrissy
    Claudia Levy
    Claudia Levy
    • Shauna
    Val Kilmer
    Val Kilmer
    • Stewart
    Jacqueline de La Fontaine
    • Jane
    • (as Jacqui Getty)
    Andrew Lutheran
    • Ivan
    Bo Mitchell
    Bo Mitchell
    • Jack O
    Bailey Coppola
    Bailey Coppola
    • Seth
    Brennen Taylor
    • Luke
    • (as Brenden Taylor)
    Atlanta De Cadenet Taylor
    Atlanta De Cadenet Taylor
    • Girl at Party
    • (as Atlanta Decadenet Taylor)
    Colleen Camp
    Colleen Camp
    • Sally
    Anna Thea Bogdanovich
    Anna Thea Bogdanovich
    • Sally's Friend
    • (as Ana Bogdanovich)
    Timothy Starks
    Timothy Starks
    • Police Officer
    • (as Tim Starks)
    Micah Nelson
    Micah Nelson
    • Michael
    • Regia
      • Gia Coppola
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Gia Coppola
      • James Franco
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti89

    6,232.7K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    8blakekhodges

    Beautiful, terrible, perfect adolescence

    Don't come looking for plot - our teen years didn't have one either. Like Dazed and Confused before it, Palo Alto throws us into the joys, pains, and emotions of the life of American-suburban adolescence. Though unlike its defacto predecessor, Palo Alto takes a look at this world through a softer, more elegant, more personal lens. The film bounces us around from character to character, all high school students in the titled town. Reckless parties, desperate sexual encounters, jealousies, weed, breaking things, sexually aggressive teachers (James Franco) and, of course, homework. It's all part of the world of Palo Alto. There is no rhyme or reason. Or is there? James Franco (whose book of short stories the film is based on) plays Mr. B, the high school soccer coach, tells his favorite player April that everything has a reason. Maybe he's right. You be the judge. Director Gia Coppola, in her first feature-length effort, works wonders at keeping the characters and the world of Palo Alto authentic. "Glee" exists in a land far, far away from here. Instead, we get an unfiltered look at what it takes to navigate the turbulence of adolescence and find our path to adulthood. It's a painful but beautiful thing.
    7StevePulaski

    A film of essences and details rather than long term significance

    Gia Coppola's Palo Alto feels like a film of Larry Clark's set in a wealthier neighborhood that wants to show that the kind of crime and moral vacuousness that exist in certain impoverished, but the issue at hand is that the film doesn't seem to want to fully commit. While by no means mediocre or not worth seeing, Palo Alto finds itself in the quandary of not always finding a clear balance between its subjects, cycling back and forth, optimistically trying to devote equal time to each characters, but sort of getting lost in a sea of transitions. Even the ending, when it should be finding a way to tie these stories together, it only seems to try to rush and wrap them up in a clean manner without giving us much in the way of connective tissue.

    Yet, with that being Palo Alto's biggest issue, I think I can go on happily. The film finds a new concept to explore other than teenage nihilism and debauchery, but the idea that just because teenagers or youths reside in a wealthy community doesn't mean they have lives as vividly-planned out as some may assume. Wealth doesn't equal direction, or even morality, is what I took from the film, and just because the idea of money at ones disposal is instilled at a young age, a clear pathway to success isn't. To build off of the famous saying "the grass isn't always greener on the other side," the grass explored in Palo Alto is the kind hyped to be beautiful because of new lawn-care application but winds up showing a few dry patches and weeds.

    The film follows a gaggle of characters living in the wealthy, upper class community of Palo Alto, California, and centers on the day-to- day lives of listless and directionless high school kids. One of the characters we find is April (Emma Roberts), a shy virgin, who finds herself torn between her flirtatious soccer coach Mr. B (James Franco) and a deceptively deep stoner named Teddy (Jack Kilmer). Another soul is Emily (Zoe Levin), a sexually promiscuous girl of the same age, who has sex with both Teddy and his close friend Fred (Nat Wolff), an unpredictable time-bomb of a teenager. The film follows April's relationship with the two key men in her life along with Fred's descent into complete chaos and madness, as well as following numerous high school parties around the neighborhood.

    The directress at hand, Gia Coppola, another member of the Coppola dynasty headlined by patriarch Francis Ford, actually shares a lot of the thematic similarities as her filmmaker aunt, Sofia Coppola. Sofia, for years, has made films with the overarching theme of wealth, fame, and alienation, focusing on characters, predominately female, growing up in extremely well-off parts of the world but having unfulfilled tendencies that money cannot buy. This is arguably related to her father being one of the most famous and renowned directors of his time, and a family that found ways to make news in Hollywood, one of the most known cities in the world. This kind of ubiquity and outside hunger for the next big thing from the family like prompted Sofia to frequently feel alone, which lead to films like Somewhere, Marie Antoinette, The Bling Ring, and Lost in Translation, all of which about an outsider's (or outsiders) desire to fit into society.

    Gia feels like she's elaborating on this idea by focusing on several teenagers, already tumultuous characters, bombarded by hormones and stimuli they have no idea how to respond to or control, and looking for the basic routes of human gratification through alcohol, sex, or meaningless shindigs. But what occurs when the buzz wears off, the clothes are put back on, and the parties die or are raided? In Palo Alto, many conversations between teenagers and their peers occur as, at the end of the day, a teen's companions are those that can resonate with them the most because of circumstantial similarities.

    Such is explored to considerable effect in the film, as characters ramble and converse quite frequently, discussing everything from trivial sexual tendencies of people to the random stupidity teenagers often debate over. While Palo Alto may be messy and often scattershot in its ideas and pacing, it definitely portrays its characters effectively, often devoting time to the inane questions teenagers ask each other and their basic desires for reassurances and empathy. Because these kids come from wealthy areas but have no direction by their parents, one can perhaps call this an outlaw story in suburbia, as these kids are not gridlocked, or even partly- committed, to any particular future, leaving them about as wayward as the cowboy on the trail.

    Palo Alto is a film of essences and details rather than long term significance, but such is the teenage way. One will likely remember certain features and events of the film, but find difficultly in defining a theme or an overarching idea grandiose enough to justify itself in a larger sense of time. I applaud it for its portrayal of a demographic I never tire of seeing on screen, and for not only including but emphasizing the random questions teenagers find themselves asking each other ("what would you do if you got in a drunk driving accident?") and their own moronic tendencies, like mixing tequila and vodka because it felt good in the moment.

    Starring: Emma Roberts, James Franco, Jack Kilmer, Nat Wolff, and Zoe Levin. Directed by: Gia Coppola.
    6bbickley13-921-58664

    Good teen movie.

    So this is what it's like to be a teen in high school these days? So basically nothing has change?

    Gia Coppola's 1st film has no plot. it's just 100mins of watching Teenagers be teenagers. If you find that interesting than go for it. It does capture the essence of being a teen quite well.

    I never read the book it was based on, which was written by James Franco who also has a small role in the film. I know the book is just a collection of short stories which is what the movie feels like, just a collection of short stories.

    I would not reject a film just because it had no plot, but I think I'm too far distant from the situation to be that interested in it. Closer to my experience was the movie Kids, which is a lot like this movie, but has a plot to it. I do think that the fact that Palo Alto has no plot makes it a much bolder movie.

    This flick is more set up for those who can related to these specific characters, rather than semi-documenting the life of teens. So while I recognize myself in some of the kids and recognize other kids I knew growing up in some of the kids, it was not enough for me.

    I think Gia's aunt Sofia is better at that, but she is the more experience film maker and it might take Gia a few more tries to get there.
    6Mengedegna

    A not-bad film that launches two terrific actors

    "Palo Alto" has a lot of direct ancestors and even more godfathers. On the shared DNA side, we have, from Gia Coppola's grandfather Francis Ford, "The Outsiders"; from her aunt Sofia, the (very recent) "Bling Ring". George Lucas, Peter Bogdanovich, Gus Van Sant, and many others look on, no doubt benevolently, at the many echoes of (or direct quotations from) their work, while Larry Clark kind of peeks in from the wings, no doubt shaking his head over how the sexy parts never go all the way.

    The sad news, I'm afraid, is that the sum does not reach the quality of the many appropriated parts.

    Interestingly, it is above all Van Sant who seems to be channeled here. This is partly due to the cinematography of Autumn Durald, which echoes, but does not equal, the work that Harris Savides and others have done for Van Sant. The many tight shots of the talented young actors have, at their best, much of the empathy and meaning that Van Sant invests in even the slightest of his young cast members. But there is nothing in this film that can remotely touch even the most casual, off-hand exchanges of the opening moments of "Elephant", for example.

    But Van Sant comes to mind above all because of the arrival here of Val Kilmer's son Jack, whose resemblance to the River Pheonix of "My Own Private Idaho" is startling. This cannot be coincidental: James Franco, the author of the source material of "Palo Alto" (and an actor in it), worked with Van Sant on a tribute to Phoenix, "My Own Private River", and the resemblance cannot have been missed as the younger Kilmer was being cast. In a film about teenagers, he alone (born in 1995) actually looks like one. (Though not as absurdly as in so many other American movies, all the other young actors look just a couple of crucial years older than the characters they are supposed to be playing.) And he feels like one, and projects complex emotions in ways that are attributable to one He is extraordinary, and required no help from the make-up department, I'm sure, to produce the growth of peach fuzz on his upper lip that appears in several of his scenes. (All credit to Coppola for letting it be.) I hope and trust that Uncle Gus is paying attention and will do something great with this talented kid before he grows too much older. (It should be noted, by the way, that Kilmer père plays a cameo here, as a step-parent grotesque who could have wandered in from a Judd Apatow movie. His brief, hammy sequences are embarrassingly out of synch with this film and should have been cut.)

    Others are quite good, too, and Emma Roberts (niece of Julia), as the female lead, is more than that -- she is revealed here to be an extraordinary actress, perhaps even the next Scarlett Johannson. Too bad that she also, as mentioned, looks a few years too old for this particular role.Still, the camera captures her with real affection and sympathy. Oddly,though the budding romance between her character and Kilmer's is the central plot line of the movie (to the extent that there is one), neither actor is seen to best effect in their (few) actual scenes together.

    Franco plays a girls' soccer coach with a dangerous glint in his eye quite well, though the camera (a recurring problem in this film) holds his reaction shots for too long, weakening rather than underlining his predatory smirk. The rest of the adults are negligible, and the other teens are more run of the mill young American actors.

    Of the plot there is little to say: teenagers in yet another California town, left to their own devices by distracted adults, stumble around, get drunk and stoned out of their minds. Sex ensues, of course (rather prudishly portrayed, with everything below the belt taking place below the frame). Attractions and jealousies sprout, with some age-appropriate hints of sexual ambiguity. Friendships hit a brick wall. Something like true love seems in the end to be brewing.

    The classics of the genre have all been made. This calling-card film shows Gia Coppola to have talent, and she no doubt will go on to do bigger and better things. One could question whether, had she not been a Coppola, this film would ever have been made, but that would be churlish, as it is in its way not bad at all and, at moments, is very good indeed. And we should all be grateful for its revelations of the younger Roberts and, especially, Kilmer, who should, by rights, head on from this to greater things in the hands of more seasoned directors. In this sense, "Palo Alto" might turn out to be "The Outsiders" of their generation: we saw them here first.
    4eddie_baggins

    Slow and aimless like the teens it portrays

    As aimless as the teens it portrays, Palo Alto see's yet another Coppola enter into the movie making business, this time Gia, Francis's (The Godfather) granddaughter and Sophia's (Lost in Translation) niece who in adapting James Franco's collection of short stories of the same name has created an at brief times realistic and insightful look into modern day teenage hood yet stumbles in actually saying anything of merit in a tale that starts depressing and ends there to.

    Palo Alto clearly wants to be a showcase for the Los Angeles brackets of teenagers, the type that party first and study later and the type that have fun by chopping down trees with chainsaws late at night. Palo Alto actually feels like more of a fever dream of a cautionary tale or look into this life as to be honest it never really connects on a level that feels wholly realistic. There type of films work best when scenarios and characters feel real or relatable and while Palo Alto can for brief moments do this, a majority of situations and players either do things that feel utterly ridiculous (like a lot of teens do, just not to this level) or downright unbelievable. This would largely stem from the source novel from Franco, who seems to make his business in being weird/alternate but Coppola shows enough here to suggest that he could've done more to make the material better.

    What Coppola does succeed in is in her direction of her young cast, while supports Nat Wolff and Zoe Levin don't do a lot to suggest they've got a career ahead, with Wolff in particular an incredibly annoying presence (how his been cast in so many movies since this effort is beyond me), young leads Emma Roberts and son of Val, Jack Kilmer show a real talent in their field. Roberts has long been a talent to watch (and much more bearable than her relative Julia) and her portrayal of confused April is a great piece of work while Kilmer as similarly wondering Teddy suggests he may one day to achieve the success of his father, with hopefully his father's weight gaining fall. Author of the novel himself Mr. James Franco also makes an appearance in what is on face value an on screen version of himself as creepy older guy looking to gain a much younger girlfriend.

    There are some nice touches to this film by Coppola, a keen eye for a nice shot makes you think she has a career ahead of her and some great lead turns by Roberts and Kilmer, but nothing could help such a cold and un-relatable piece of work ever become anything more than acceptable. We've been blessed over the years to have countless and memorable entries into the young teen/coming of age drama catalogue and with Palo Alto you're much better off to find one of these, instead of watching this instantly disposable offering.

    2 Grand Theft Auto playing Val Kilmer's out of 5

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    Trama

    Modifica

    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      Teddy's room in the movie is Jack's room in real life.
    • Blooper
      When Joy tells Teddy that Tanya's daughter liked his pictures, she asks him to see her in room 22. In the next scene the number on the door as Teddy enters is 25.
    • Citazioni

      April: I wish I didn't care about anything. But I do care. I care about everything too much.

    • Connessioni
      Featured in Half in the Bag: 2014 Movie Catch-up: Part 1 (2014)
    • Colonne sonore
      Champagne Coast
      Performed by Devonté Hynes

      Recording courtesy of Domino Recording Company Inc.

      Written by Devonté Hynes (as Dev Hynes)

      Published by Domino Publishing Company USA (ASCAP)

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 9 maggio 2014 (Stati Uniti)
    • Paese di origine
      • Stati Uniti
    • Siti ufficiali
      • Official site (Japan)
      • Official Tumblr
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • 帕羅奧圖年少
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Woodland Hills, Los Angeles, California, Stati Uniti(as 'Palo Alto' area)
    • Aziende produttrici
      • American Zoetrope
      • Rabbit Bandini Productions
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Botteghino

    Modifica
    • Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 767.732 USD
    • Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 63.461 USD
      • 11 mag 2014
    • Lordo in tutto il mondo
      • 919.591 USD
    Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

    Modifica
    • Tempo di esecuzione
      1 ora 40 minuti
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Mix di suoni
      • Dolby Digital
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.85 : 1

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