Após a morte do pai, um irmão e uma irmã de meia-idade lutam com o legado e a propriedade quando três irmãos, cuja família cultivou a terra por gerações, retornam após 50 anos.Após a morte do pai, um irmão e uma irmã de meia-idade lutam com o legado e a propriedade quando três irmãos, cuja família cultivou a terra por gerações, retornam após 50 anos.Após a morte do pai, um irmão e uma irmã de meia-idade lutam com o legado e a propriedade quando três irmãos, cuja família cultivou a terra por gerações, retornam após 50 anos.
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- 1 vitória e 1 indicação no total
Avaliações em destaque
This film asks us to consider the multiple narratives held, transformed and given by the land. While we try to demonstrate ownership, or declare our freedom, through our own stories about a place, none of us can defend or maintain our boundaries for very long. With fine acting, a beautiful score and a well-considered but unadorned presentation, Abundant Acreage Available is an opportunity for recalibration through reflection on our common destiny. Highly recommended as an antidote to the Hollywood blockbuster!
I liked they way whole screen play unfolds, every new frame reveals a new mystery about a character and as and when the movie progresses the character evolves in your mind and every new frame requires you to undo and rebuild the character to match the new information. At the end you still feel that you still do not know the character fully especially when the younger brother says why he want to be left alone. Then you realize that with the new circumstances and life he himself will start a new life and will evolve to to be a new character to meet the necessities of the environment he is in. Very well taken and nice acting.
Backed by Scorsese, writer and director Angus Maclachlin shows the brilliance possible in independent film. In Abundant Acreage, MacLachlin creates a cinema-graphically rich portrayal of a multi-generational family whose own comedic tragedy is interrupted by a band of interlopers. Simply beautiful. What an immersive film experience of laughter, tears, and drama is all about. You want every person in America to see this film. (....and then go watch Junebug, MacLaghlin's acclaimed 2005 Drama/Comedy)
The best actor cannot revive a dying plot, sterile and hopeless.
"Abundant Acreage Available" is the kind of movie that is content to take its own sweet time telling its story. There is no particular interest in rushing fast forward from scene to scene at light speed. Or investing any real sense of urgency at all, actually. This is filmmaking done at an expressly intentional pace of leisure and deliberation. Particularly in this "gotta have it five minutes ago" mentality we race through with such fevered freneticism in today's world.
And it is f-----' wonderful.
This would quite likely be a whole different review if this domestic drama were left to the devices of lesser actors. In fact, "Abundant Acreage Available" would almost assuredly have been an excruciating exercise in relentless tedium if that were the unfortunate case. Gratefully, and emphatically, it certainly is not.
Amy Ryan, Max Gail, Steve Coulter, Terry Kinney and Francis Guinan are uniformly exquisite in bringing their respective remarkable characters to life. In so doing they give us genuine multi-dimensional human beings who resonate with understated yet resoundingly affecting fragility of both body and soul.
Writer, Director and Co-Producer Angus MacLachlan has crafted a beautiful chronicle of family, love and loss (with a big boost from Directorial legend Martin Scorsese, who Exec Produces here). MacLachlan's choice to use a generations-old North Carolina tobacco farm as the sole setting for "Abundant Acreage Available" brilliantly serves to softly amplify the pervading themes of isolation, loneliness and quiet desperation which so movingly saturate every single scene.
And, hey. Listen up all you mysterious voters of the confoundingly clandestine Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Amy Ryan gets nominated for "Best Actress". Okay? And Max Gail is up for a "Best Supporting Actor" Oscar. Got it? Alas, one can only hope. Each of these vaunted veterans have richly earned such lofty reward. Regrettably, it is unlikely that either Ryan or Gail will be officially recognized for their stunningly authentic performances. And while that is truly sad and indefensible, it certainly does not diminish the peerless quality of their work.
And finally, if you will be so kind as to indulge, I simply can NOT sign off until I get this out of my system.
Amy Ryan has the smile of a goddess.
Lamentably it was not on display near enough in this production, as her personification of Tracy is inherently solemn and stoic in nature. Still, when those precious few frames were delightfully illuminated by Ms. Ryan's devastatingly delicious grin, it was the stuff of pure magic, that from which springs enchantment in......well......what else? Abundance.
And it is f-----' wonderful.
This would quite likely be a whole different review if this domestic drama were left to the devices of lesser actors. In fact, "Abundant Acreage Available" would almost assuredly have been an excruciating exercise in relentless tedium if that were the unfortunate case. Gratefully, and emphatically, it certainly is not.
Amy Ryan, Max Gail, Steve Coulter, Terry Kinney and Francis Guinan are uniformly exquisite in bringing their respective remarkable characters to life. In so doing they give us genuine multi-dimensional human beings who resonate with understated yet resoundingly affecting fragility of both body and soul.
Writer, Director and Co-Producer Angus MacLachlan has crafted a beautiful chronicle of family, love and loss (with a big boost from Directorial legend Martin Scorsese, who Exec Produces here). MacLachlan's choice to use a generations-old North Carolina tobacco farm as the sole setting for "Abundant Acreage Available" brilliantly serves to softly amplify the pervading themes of isolation, loneliness and quiet desperation which so movingly saturate every single scene.
And, hey. Listen up all you mysterious voters of the confoundingly clandestine Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Amy Ryan gets nominated for "Best Actress". Okay? And Max Gail is up for a "Best Supporting Actor" Oscar. Got it? Alas, one can only hope. Each of these vaunted veterans have richly earned such lofty reward. Regrettably, it is unlikely that either Ryan or Gail will be officially recognized for their stunningly authentic performances. And while that is truly sad and indefensible, it certainly does not diminish the peerless quality of their work.
And finally, if you will be so kind as to indulge, I simply can NOT sign off until I get this out of my system.
Amy Ryan has the smile of a goddess.
Lamentably it was not on display near enough in this production, as her personification of Tracy is inherently solemn and stoic in nature. Still, when those precious few frames were delightfully illuminated by Ms. Ryan's devastatingly delicious grin, it was the stuff of pure magic, that from which springs enchantment in......well......what else? Abundance.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesIn Memory of Clyde Fowler- Clyde was a most excellent art teacher at the University of North Carolina School of The Arts. He was a great supporter of the arts around Winston-Salem NC and a very good friend of the writer/director of this film. He is sorely missed by many.
- ConexõesFeatured in O Projecionista (2019)
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- How long is Abundant Acreage Available?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- Αχανής έκταση για πούλημα
- Locações de filme
- East Bend, Carolina do Norte, EUA(Farm House)
- Empresa de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 20 min(80 min)
- Cor
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