Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaA bumbling city council has a mission to revitalize the once great steel town of Youngstown, Ohio. Desperate for funds, they resort to soliciting money from the widow of mobster Sonny "the S... Ler tudoA bumbling city council has a mission to revitalize the once great steel town of Youngstown, Ohio. Desperate for funds, they resort to soliciting money from the widow of mobster Sonny "the Sponge".A bumbling city council has a mission to revitalize the once great steel town of Youngstown, Ohio. Desperate for funds, they resort to soliciting money from the widow of mobster Sonny "the Sponge".
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
It was soooo BAD! I laugh at idiots on the street and in Bars but people acting like idiots does not play well in a movie. It was just sooo awfully weird, and not funny, so much so that I had to quit after 10 minutes and a little fast forwarding because It got no better.
The characters these actors were try to get us to laugh at were totally annoying the drivel they were spouting just made me wanna poke out my eyes and pierce my eardrums, then cut out my toung so I never have to say, see or hear the words "Sonny Days" ever again.
The Devil in hell might be the only buyer of this on DVD to use as a torture instrument so I gave 2 stars for that.
The characters these actors were try to get us to laugh at were totally annoying the drivel they were spouting just made me wanna poke out my eyes and pierce my eardrums, then cut out my toung so I never have to say, see or hear the words "Sonny Days" ever again.
The Devil in hell might be the only buyer of this on DVD to use as a torture instrument so I gave 2 stars for that.
Happy to be the first person to comment about this film. It is both a delightfully zany comedy with a talented ensemble of colorful characters and a heartfelt history lesson on the notoriously crime- ridden and poverty-plagued Youngstown, Ohio. It skillfully balances stinging satire of and affectionate tribute to this dying but not- quite-dead-yet former steel town.
The story centers on the four ragtag members of the Youngstown Economic Develop Authority (YEDA) who, desperate for money, seek financial support from the prickly, aging widow of one of Youngstown's most famous and vicious mobsters, Sonny the "Sponge" Sapella. But it wisely doesn't get bogged down with plot (as many Hollywood comedies do). Like the best indie comedies, "Sonny Days" has a loose, improvisational structure that keeps the focus on concept and characterization. And laughs.
The cast is wonderful, major and minor characters sharply defined. Everyone gets a chance to shine, and the film has a winning "Oh, what the heck, let's try this nutty gag" spirit. Kati Lightholder is a hoot as the permanently peeved Sophie, her rotten attitude, doomed body language and bleak outlook perfectly symbolizing Youngstown's decay. (Though with a surprising secret skill revealed over the end credits). James Howard is strong as Mayor White, a former high-school football star who delivers hilariously tone-deaf, can-do campaign speeches in the most inappropriate places.
But the revelation is director and co-writer Tom Megalis, who steals the show as Chuck Coolenzo, Sonny's former henchman and now the heart and soul of YEDA, whose faith in Youngstown could move mountains were it not for his tragic weakness for non sequiturs. Like some kind of demented don't-try-this-at-home hybrid of Joe Pesci and Christopher Penn, his manic, desperate energy drives the film. It's the kind of confident, polished performance that makes you wonder why you haven't seen him in anything else.
"Sonny Days" is a genuinely funny and engaging comedy and highly recommended for fans of the offbeat.
The story centers on the four ragtag members of the Youngstown Economic Develop Authority (YEDA) who, desperate for money, seek financial support from the prickly, aging widow of one of Youngstown's most famous and vicious mobsters, Sonny the "Sponge" Sapella. But it wisely doesn't get bogged down with plot (as many Hollywood comedies do). Like the best indie comedies, "Sonny Days" has a loose, improvisational structure that keeps the focus on concept and characterization. And laughs.
The cast is wonderful, major and minor characters sharply defined. Everyone gets a chance to shine, and the film has a winning "Oh, what the heck, let's try this nutty gag" spirit. Kati Lightholder is a hoot as the permanently peeved Sophie, her rotten attitude, doomed body language and bleak outlook perfectly symbolizing Youngstown's decay. (Though with a surprising secret skill revealed over the end credits). James Howard is strong as Mayor White, a former high-school football star who delivers hilariously tone-deaf, can-do campaign speeches in the most inappropriate places.
But the revelation is director and co-writer Tom Megalis, who steals the show as Chuck Coolenzo, Sonny's former henchman and now the heart and soul of YEDA, whose faith in Youngstown could move mountains were it not for his tragic weakness for non sequiturs. Like some kind of demented don't-try-this-at-home hybrid of Joe Pesci and Christopher Penn, his manic, desperate energy drives the film. It's the kind of confident, polished performance that makes you wonder why you haven't seen him in anything else.
"Sonny Days" is a genuinely funny and engaging comedy and highly recommended for fans of the offbeat.
Você sabia?
- ConexõesFollows Youngstown Shakedown (2011)
Principais escolhas
Faça login para avaliar e ver a lista de recomendações personalizadas
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Central de atendimento oficial
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- Youngstown Shakedown Part 2: Sonny Days
- Locações de filme
- Empresas de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
Bilheteria
- Orçamento
- US$ 220.000 (estimativa)
- Tempo de duração1 hora 12 minutos
- Cor
- Proporção
- 1.85 : 1
Contribua para esta página
Sugerir uma alteração ou adicionar conteúdo ausente