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IMDbPro

Onde Nasce a Esperança

Título original: Where Hope Grows
  • 2014
  • 12
  • 1 h 35 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,6/10
4,8 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Onde Nasce a Esperança (2014)
A self-destructive former pro ball player is given a serious lesson in living life with courage when he befriends a grocery store clerk with Down syndrome.
Reproduzir trailer2:32
13 vídeos
51 fotos
DramaFamília

Um jogador de beisebol cuja carreira profissional foi encurtada devido a seus problemas pessoais é subitamente desperto e revitalizado por um jovem com síndrome de Down que trabalha na loja ... Ler tudoUm jogador de beisebol cuja carreira profissional foi encurtada devido a seus problemas pessoais é subitamente desperto e revitalizado por um jovem com síndrome de Down que trabalha na loja local.Um jogador de beisebol cuja carreira profissional foi encurtada devido a seus problemas pessoais é subitamente desperto e revitalizado por um jovem com síndrome de Down que trabalha na loja local.

  • Direção
    • Chris Dowling
  • Roteirista
    • Chris Dowling
  • Artistas
    • Kristoffer Polaha
    • David DeSanctis
    • McKaley Miller
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,6/10
    4,8 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Chris Dowling
    • Roteirista
      • Chris Dowling
    • Artistas
      • Kristoffer Polaha
      • David DeSanctis
      • McKaley Miller
    • 45Avaliações de usuários
    • 16Avaliações da crítica
    • 41Metascore
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 3 vitórias e 1 indicação no total

    Vídeos13

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:32
    Trailer
    Castingof David
    Clip 2:46
    Castingof David
    Castingof David
    Clip 2:46
    Castingof David
    Fruitball
    Clip 2:48
    Fruitball
    The Ride
    Clip 4:17
    The Ride
    Mr Campbells Melon
    Clip 2:22
    Mr Campbells Melon
    Fruits And Vegetables
    Clip 2:31
    Fruits And Vegetables

    Fotos51

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    Elenco principal85

    Editar
    Kristoffer Polaha
    Kristoffer Polaha
    • Calvin
    David DeSanctis
    David DeSanctis
    • Produce
    McKaley Miller
    McKaley Miller
    • Katie
    Michael Grant
    Michael Grant
    • Colt
    William Zabka
    William Zabka
    • Milton
    • (as Billy Zabka)
    Brooke Burns
    Brooke Burns
    • Amy
    Clyde Risley Jones
    • Dexter
    • (as Clyde Jones)
    Alan Powell
    Alan Powell
    • Franklin
    Danica McKellar
    Danica McKellar
    • Susan
    Kerr Smith
    Kerr Smith
    • Officer Minniear
    Drew Cash
    Drew Cash
    • Eric
    J. Teddy Garces
    J. Teddy Garces
    • Doctor Jones
    Chase Anderson
    Chase Anderson
    • Jackson
    Sonya Thaper
    • Nurse Meera
    Michelle J. Fine
    • Nurse Kristen
    • (as Michelle Fine)
    Ken Arnold
    Ken Arnold
    • Steve Bookerson
    Daniel Harrison Smith
    • Game Vendor
    Rebecca Lines
    Rebecca Lines
    • Laura
    • Direção
      • Chris Dowling
    • Roteirista
      • Chris Dowling
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários45

    6,64.7K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    8kho-89309

    We live in a world polluted by negativity and Where Hope Grows was a much needed breath of fresh air!

    Where Hope Grows was a beautiful movie. I've watched many movies of all genres and I can honestly say that this film made my heart happy. We live in a world surrounded by negativity and to sit in a theater and experience laughing with the characters and feeling the emotions of giving up on life, only to realize that at that one desperate moment when you thought you were alone...all you needed to do was let go and let hope grow. Great storyline. Not only is this a great family movie and a reminder of the blessing of being alive, it has a message that speaks to your heart and at the same time knocks down some of the stereotypes associated with Downs Syndrome. David was amazing as Produce. The theater was filled with laughter and tears, as he delivered an unquestionably brilliant performance.
    8Ramascreen

    It changes you for the better

    he last Christian-themed or faith-based movie I actually enjoyed was "Fireproof" and that was more than seven years ago, I was a single man and that movie even spoke to me, whether or not you're married, whether or not you're a believer, you can learn a lot from "Fireproof," and I think that's what makes WHERE HOPE GROWS effective, is that you may be at the point in your life where you're still looking for what it is that you'd like to believe in, but you can still get something out of watching this good-hearted film that changes you for the better.

    I'm with you there when I say that I don't like movies that are too preachy or all up in your face, shoving sermons down your throat, which is why I had avoided pretty much every faith-based movie since "Fireproof" because the level of preachiness just went through the roof, most of them were not even about story and characters anymore. If I wanted to watch sermons, I'd simply just straight up watch it off youtube, there's tons of evangelical seminars on the web, but if I come to watch a film, a film is what I want to end up watching.

    From writer/director Chris Dowling, WHERE HOPE GROWS, in a nutshell is about Kristoffer Polaha's character, Calvin Campbell, a former pro baseball player whose career was cut short due to panic attacks at the plate. Nowadays, he turns to alcohol for solace and struggles raising his teen daughter (McKaley Miller). Calvin strikes an unlikely friendship with a young man with down syndrome, Produce (David DeSanctis) who works at a local grocery store. This friendship gives Calvin a new look on life as he finds redemption, but this friendship will also be put to the test.

    I think it's wise move on the filmmakers' part that they cast an actual man with down syndrome to play Produce, instead of having actors like Cuba Gooding Jr. ("Radio") or Dustin Hoffman ("Rain Man") for example. There is a benefit to actors convincingly pretending to be what they're not, but there is an even more benefit to just giving the role to someone who literally knows what it's like to be that person. And David does a fantastic job of balancing vulnerability, humor, and ingenuity. You take a few seconds look at David and the way he carries himself, and it suddenly makes you want to be a better person. I must admit, as far as filmmaking goes, it's extremely simple, nothing much about it that would blow your mind, this is a case of working within the budget that you're given. The plot is also very thin, very generic, this is the type of road from self pity to redemption that you've seen a thousand times before, but I still enjoy the themes quite much, and I think WHERE HOPE GROWS is an important film that young generation today need to watch so that they can learn to be more sensitive and tolerant and more accepting of those whose are different from us.

    Read more at Ramascreen.Com
    9shafferapril1

    See this film.

    This epitomizes what I think Heartland Film Festival is about. Challenging us to see and act differently. To open our hearts to the possibilities of change from deep community. To see our incredible need for connection and meaning. Calvin needed Produce as much as Produce needed Calvin. They filled a hole for each other. They were iron sharpening iron, each challenging the other to make them stronger.

    It would have been easy to fall into cheesy campy film making with this plot...washed up sports hero meets downs syndrome boy at grocery store. But somehow it felt, as a viewer, that you were actually a fly on the wall watching a friendship form in an authentic, organic fashion. The timing of their meeting felt pre-ordained, like something bigger or higher was putting them together at the right time. I loved the religious undertones. Real without shoving it in your face. But faith portrayed as something that provides hope and encouragement, is real and worth having.

    As a viewer, I wanted Calvin to find meaning for his life and daughter. And I wanted Produce to have a family and attain work success despite his simplicity. But as the tale was told, it wasn't tied up with a pretty grosgrain ribbon. It allowed pain and suffering and self hatred and pity to resonate in a way that was identifiable. The viewer knows people like Calvin and his daughter. People you can't help but love and pull for, even when you are ticked at their selfish pity party, and bratty teenage ways. We could all use more Produce in our lives.
    8CleveMan66

    "Where Hope Grows" is a film that shows rather than tells and inspires rather than preaches.

    The history of physically and/or mentally challenged actors isn't a long one, but it is expanding, and it added a significant chapter with the release of "Where Hope Grows" (PG-13, 1:35). That movie co-stars David DeSanctis as a young man with Down syndrome, one of the first major English-language film roles for an actor living with that condition. With this role, DeSanctis has achieved an on-screen prominence that is not unique, but only a few others who live with such serious conditions have reached that level of success in their careers. Chris Burke became a pioneer playing Corky, a boy with Down syndrome, in the TV series "Life Goes On" (1989-1993) and he also appeared in the film "Mona Lisa Smile" (2003). After a horse riding accident in 1995 left him paralyzed, Christopher Reeve, known primarily for his "Superman" films, continued to work in movies and television until his death in 2004. RJ Mitte, who lives with cerebral palsy, played Walter White, Jr. on TV in "Breaking Bad" (2008-2013) and is set to appear in three films to be released over the next two years.

    But it's actors with Down syndrome who have made the most significant inroads on behalf of differently-abled actors. Lauren Potter co-starred in the film "Mr. Blue Sky" (2007) and on the TV series "Glee" (2009-2015), while Evan Sneider had the largest film role for someone with his condition in "Girlfriend" (2010)… that is, until "Where Hope Grows". As awareness of certain limiting conditions has grown in recent years, the common refrain from those who are mentally and/or physically challenged (and their families, friends and advocates) is that they most want to be treated like everyone else. In that spirit, I'm prepared to review DeSanctis' film with the objectivity that I try to bring to all of my reviews (even though he IS great in it).

    DeSanctis plays a grocery store employee who is called "Produce", after the tag he wears on his green apron, indicating the department where he works. Produce always seems to be in a good mood and always treats his store's customers with respect and affection, dispensing encouraging words and hugs as freely as tomatoes. Produce's positivity has the biggest impact on Calvin Campbell (Kristoffer Polaha), a down-on-his luck former baseball player who lives in the neighborhood. But to be fair, luck (or lack thereof) doesn't have much to do with Calvin's problems. He has allowed his unfulfilled potential in the bigs to keep him down for 15 years. He doesn't work and he's an alcoholic who also happens to be a single parent to 17-year-old Katie (McKaley Miller). She loves her father, but can only wish that she could respect him. He constantly disappoints her, caring more about spending time with his drinking buddies, Milton (William Zabka) and Mitch (Kerr Smith) than with her.

    Calvin's drinking is at the core of most of the conflicts within this movie. His neglect of his daughter leaves her free to be in an unhealthy relationship with the somewhat older and practically amoral Colt (Michael Grant) and dad has no moral high ground to stand on when he objects to his daughter hanging out with Colt. Calvin also drinks and drives with regularity, endangering other drivers, himself and those who are unlucky or unwise enough to be riding with him. His self-destructive tendencies also jeopardize his possible future personal and professional relationships, like when he gets an opportunity to interview to be the next manager of a local minor league baseball team, or when he meets a kind and good-looking woman (Brooke Burns) in the grocery store. Produce is anxious to be Calvin's friend and help Calvin see his personal problems differently, but even the sweet and growing friendship between Produce and Calvin seems unlikely to… bear fruit, if Calvin can't manage to put down the bottle.

    In spite of all his issues, Calvin's friendship with Produce seems like his best shot at redemption. Obviously needing some of Produce's upbeat, can-do attitude, Calvin asks Produce what his secret is. "It's not a secret, Mr. Campbell," Produce says. Appearances of Produce's Bible in a few scenes make it no surprise when Produce asks Calvin to come to church with him. Yes, this is a movie with a definite Christian message, but it never gets preachy. Produce sometimes quotes the Bible, without saying that he's quoting the Bible. It's just how he talks. It's part of who he is. Eventually, we do see a church service, hear the Bible read aloud, hear a discussion about prayer and see a funeral service, but in each case, these are short scenes that are more focused on moving the plot forward than trying to evangelize. The Bible does say that actions matter more than words. Rather than hearing a lot of talk about right and wrong and there being a single answer to everyone's problems, we are SHOWN examples of good and bad choices… and what it takes to turn negatives into positives.

    "Where Hope Grows" is a Christian movie, but I think it's better described as an inspirational film. It's a family-friendly look at the results of the choices people make and the attitudes that drive those choices. The story contains sweetness, drama, tragedy and hope. The film is well-written, well-directed, well-acted and, especially well-edited, with an ending that I'll remember for a long time to come. A few of the plot points did feel a bit contrived, even melodramatic, but most of the story feels like real life – a reality where hope can grow if its seed is properly nurtured. This movie, like all movies worth watching, has a point of view, but whether you agree with its underlying message or not, it's hard to imagine anyone not enjoying this film. Kudos to one very special young man and his fellow actors for giving us such an experience. In my opinion, your efforts are good enough to Produce an "A-".
    10abbygregory60

    A life changing movie- opening eyes and hearts

    This move was incredibly heartwarming. It was a fantastic film, not just because it highlighted the reality of down syndrome, but because it truly captured the reality of everyday life. It should be commended for its bold efforts in changing the stereotypes of people with and without intellectual and developmental disabilities. However, the movie is so much more than a cause- it is a generally fantastic film. From the actors, to the filmography, to the story, this movie excels. It is touching, moving, and enjoyable. This movie goes where no other move has gone- it truly highlights life. I recommend this movie wholly on the fact that it is well made, not just as an activist for equality for people with disabilities, but as a person who laughed and cried during this fantastic piece.

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    Enredo

    Editar

    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      David DeSanctis will become one of the first actors with Down syndrome to play a leading role in an English-language feature film.
    • Citações

      Produce: I'm doing good. Even when I'm doing bad, I'm doing good.

    • Conexões
      References Rain Man (1988)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Life, Love and Pain
      Written by Kyle James Hauser

      Performed by Kyle James Hauser

      Courtesy of sonaBLAST! Records

    Principais escolhas

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    Perguntas frequentes18

    • How long is Where Hope Grows?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 15 de maio de 2015 (Estados Unidos da América)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Centrais de atendimento oficiais
      • Official site
      • Official site
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • El poder de la esperanza
    • Locações de filme
      • Louisville, Kentucky, EUA
    • Empresas de produção
      • Godspeed Pictures
      • Stealth Tiger Entertainment
      • Attic Light Films
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 1.156.000
    • Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 457.287
      • 17 de mai. de 2015
    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 1.159.072
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 1 h 35 min(95 min)
    • Cor
      • Color

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