Walkaway Joe
- 2020
- 1h 29m
IMDb RATING
5.6/10
1.5K
YOUR RATING
The story of an unlikely friendship between a young boy searching for his father, and a wandering loner hiding from his past.The story of an unlikely friendship between a young boy searching for his father, and a wandering loner hiding from his past.The story of an unlikely friendship between a young boy searching for his father, and a wandering loner hiding from his past.
Tony DeMil
- T. Stokes
- (as Tony Demil)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Somebody mentioned that they didn't understand why all the good reviews and that they gave up halfway through. Well chances are the good reviews came from people who stuck it out till the end.
Good pool movie. I always like it when you can tell the actors are really shooting pool and they don't cut away from the actor to the shot, making you think that somebody other than the actor actually made the shot. You can tell that the actors are either decent pool players or they took the time to practice for the film.
Is this kid the son of some producer or something? This film could have been something halfway decent. It isn't. I knew in the first 15 minutes this kid wasn't right for this role. He's young, and might still have a future in front of him but this was too meaty a role to rest on the shoulders of someone so inexperienced and so obviously not up to the task. He looks and sounds like someone from the Hudson Valley but I'm supposed to buy that this kid is from Louisiana? It's a good enough story, standard run of the mill father/son/mentor picture and I really like these kinds of films, but it's bogged down by a poor lead performance. I don't regret watching it as I'm a huge Morgan/Strathairn fan. Emery is a good actress as well. It's not a bad story, just something that's been done a million times before, and better. Could have benefitted from a better lead.
With the two lead actors and the premise of this film, it could have been so much more. Unfortunately the film mirrors the acting of the central character portrayed by Julian Feder. Here is a meaty role with a meaningful journey, but the film falls flat, as does Feder's performance, or should we say lack thereof. Young man's search for father, part road trip, part billiards competition. We can't pull for the son because he takes us no where, emotionally. We really can't cheer for him in the pool competition either, because the characterization is so distant and vapid. The elements are all present, but neither the performance by the young protagonist (who does NOT look 14 y.o.) or the direction, allow us to get there. Too bad, but not memorable in the least.
Had some potential but I feel like they didn't know which cliche path they wanted this film to take.. also with as much focus and screen time the "14 year-old boy" receives they could've found a muchore talented actor. I'm sorry the kid was terrible.
I'm glad I didn't listen to the negative reviews about this movie. I recommend watching for yourself. Julian Feder, who plays the boy the movie centers around, does a good job in his role. That's for viewers who have never really seen bad acting. The movie flowed well and the storyline was well developed. The ending was satisfying to me because it mirrored how life can truly be. It was not predictable, unless of course you sit and try to think of every possible scenerio. Feder plays well alongside seasoned actor, David Strathairn, who carries the secondary plot, as well as Jeffrey Dean Morgan, who plays his dad.
Did you know
- TriviaAt the end when Dallas gets off the camper and goes home He does not have His Cue stick.
- GoofsBetween the 24 minute and 27 minute mark when Dallas and Joe are travelling in the winnebago there is a reasonable breeze that is showing as being blown from the passenger window side. However, in the exterior scenes it is shown as being a calmer day proving that a green screen or some other SFX was at play in creating these SPX.
- Quotes
[last lines]
Dallas McCarthy: Think God ever makes mistakes when he assigns children to their parents?
Joe Haley: I don't know.
Dallas McCarthy: He should have put us together.
Joe Haley: He did, son. He did.
- Crazy creditsThe first part of the closing credits roll on alternating footage of Joe driving his camper and scenery he passes.
- How long is Walkaway Joe?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime1 hour 29 minutes
- Color
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