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Promised Land

  • 1987
  • R
  • 1h 42m
IMDb RATING
5.7/10
1.6K
YOUR RATING
Promised Land (1987)
Drama

Gritty drama that follows two high school acquaintances, Hancock, a basketball star, and Danny, a geek turned drifter, after they graduate.Gritty drama that follows two high school acquaintances, Hancock, a basketball star, and Danny, a geek turned drifter, after they graduate.Gritty drama that follows two high school acquaintances, Hancock, a basketball star, and Danny, a geek turned drifter, after they graduate.

  • Director
    • Michael Hoffman
  • Writer
    • Michael Hoffman
  • Stars
    • Jason Gedrick
    • Kiefer Sutherland
    • Meg Ryan
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.7/10
    1.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Michael Hoffman
    • Writer
      • Michael Hoffman
    • Stars
      • Jason Gedrick
      • Kiefer Sutherland
      • Meg Ryan
    • 16User reviews
    • 14Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 nominations total

    Photos33

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    Top cast47

    Edit
    Jason Gedrick
    Jason Gedrick
    • Hancock
    Kiefer Sutherland
    Kiefer Sutherland
    • Danny
    Meg Ryan
    Meg Ryan
    • Bev
    Tracy Pollan
    Tracy Pollan
    • Mary
    Googy Gress
    Googy Gress
    • Baines
    Deborah Richter
    Deborah Richter
    • Pammie
    Oscar Rowland
    Oscar Rowland
    • Mr. Rivers
    Sandra Seacat
    Sandra Seacat
    • Mrs. Rivers
    Jay Underwood
    Jay Underwood
    • Circle K Clerk
    Herta Ware
    • Mrs. Higgins
    Logan Field
    • High School Coach
    • (as Walt Logan Field)
    Kelly Ausland
    • Schroeder…
    Todd Anderson
    • Pat Rivers
    Dave Valenza
    • Glenn
    Theron Read
    • Harting
    Richard Matthews
    • Mel
    Cindy Clark
    Cindy Clark
    • Vera
    Charles Black
    • Preacher
    • Director
      • Michael Hoffman
    • Writer
      • Michael Hoffman
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews16

    5.71.6K
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    Featured reviews

    5abooboo-2

    Falls Short Of The Mark

    When I was growing up my folks had a saying for whenever I wasn't able to finish some mouth-watering dessert that I had insisted on getting: my eyes were too big for my stomach. That's how I felt about this ambitious but under-inflated would-be epic. It very much wants to be a sort of quintessential 80's picture, a final say on the tragic consequences of so-called Reagan-era greed and consumerism, but it keeps pulling up lame. Like a novice trial lawyer it falters nearly every time it tries to make its case.

    Occasionally it gets things right and briefly wanders into "A Simple Plan" or "The Last Picture Show" territory, in its double-edged depiction of small town security and frustration. There's a terrific, understated scene between Jason Gedrick and Tracy Pollan as they swim in a hot spring and lazily recall some of their glory days. Kiefer Sutherland and Meg Ryan have some nice fragile moments in the desert when these two lost souls discover the joy of actually connecting, however briefly, with another human being. There are glimmers of something substantial going on here, which is what makes the whole so disappointing.

    The biggest flaw is the amount of time elapsed from Gedrick's game-winning buzzer beater that kicks the story off, to a mere TWO years later, when the 4 principles are at their big "crossroads" in life. Two years is simply not long enough. The film is making the specious argument that somehow Reagan's cold-hearted policies (he appears a couple times on television making supposedly "empty", out of touch speeches) are to blame for Gedrick dropping out of school and settling for becoming a local cop, or Sutherland hitting the road because he can't live up to his nickname ("Senator") by the ripe old age of 19! Yeah, fate and that trickle down economy are really conspiring against those two, aren't they? In order for an audience to really FEEL their desperation, they need to be older with their directions in life more set in concrete. That's why "A Simple Plan" worked so well, where here it's much harder to sympathize with the lead characters. Hell, chalk it up as a bad year or two. They all still have plenty of time to right the ship.

    The acting is generally okay. I thought Meg Ryan over-did the hell-raising a bit, but at least she gives the film some real jolts of energy. Gedrick pulls a classic, 4 star nutty in a kitchen at one point that would make Mickey Rourke proud. Unfortunately the writing too often lets them down. There's such a fine line between having inarticulate characters groping for words to express themselves, and the screenwriter groping to give them something meaningful and revealing to say. In this case, it sure felt like the screenwriter was doing the most groping. There's just too many "It's not you. It's me!" and "You just ... don't understand!" type lines. Many of the arguments are forced and unconvincing.

    I really liked the film's collision course structure, many of its visuals (the spinning camera around the little car in the desert casts an undeniable spell) and even its bombastic score full of "end of the world" chants and that sort of thing. It was setting me up for a conclusion that I was expecting to have so much more of an impact than it ultimately did. It didn't dig deep enough, didn't flesh out its people or their world (the town is never given a personality other than generically small and sleepy) sufficiently for me to care as much as I wanted to. But I did WANT to, and perhaps that's a small accomplishment. It's certainly better than the not entirely dissimilar "Inventing The Abbotts". But if you really want to see a more successful though equally forgotten riff on these very themes check out an early Bridget Fonda flick called "Out Of The Rain".
    7claudio_carvalho

    The Fate of Each One in a Great Low Budget Movie

    In the small town of Ashville, Hancock (Jason Gedrick) is the best basketball player and local hero. Mary (Tracy Pollan) is a cheerleader and his gorgeous girlfriend. They both intend to go to the college together. Their friend Danny 'The Senator' (Kiefer Sutherland) quits high school and moves alone to the Arizona, trying to have a good job and a better life. A couple of years later, Hancock is the local chief of police, living from his glorious past; Mary is studying Arts, and although still loving Hancock, she can not accept life in Ashville and has a new boyfriend; and Danny is a complete loser, who decides to get married with the crazy Beverly (Meg Ryan) and spend the Christmas Eve in his home town with his family. The story ends in a tragic way. 'Promised Land' is a depressive tale about the fate of each one and, in accordance with the initial credits, is based on a true story. The young cast has a great performance, the story is never corny, and it is great to see an American low budget movie about real common people, and not the fancy Hollywood reality. My vote is seven.

    Title (Brazil): 'Terra Prometida' ('Promised Land')
    7Havan_IronOak

    Bleak small budget film about the small town folks and their sometimes small dreams and lives.

    Dave Hancock is a small town athletic star who goes away to college as a basketball player on scholarship. When he washes out of the team he drops out of college and comes home to find a job on the local Police department where he's comfortable among the folks he's always known and able to relax in his former glory.

    Mary his head cheerleader girl friend goes away to school to study art but also longs for the small-town life and the boy she's left behind. She's got big dreams but is afraid to leave the comfort of the small town and afraid to tell her family she wants to stay.

    Danny Rivers, tagged `the Senator' was a nobody in high school and can't wait to leave for the world outside the town he's grown up in and the bleak undemonstrative family that raised him.

    When Danny meets and marries a crazy do-as-she-pleases girl he decides to return home and all of their lives are changed forever...

    I found this movie to be evocative of a period and had better than average character development but this film will not appeal to all. It is a sketch of a time and a place and the people there. They are not archtypes, they are not universal but they are realistic and you can care about them and as with many sketches the viewer is left with the desire for more, a more complete picture, a better sense of what comes next and even a few more details about the present.
    L-Jet

    Tragedy is often not well received

    I can't believe anyone referred to this as fluff;hate it, but no way is this fluff. It was almost creepy to me how this non-didactic near masterpiece captured a lot of what the 80's were about for most Americans by telling this seemingly simple tale of disaffected young people in some small burg in the Midwest. Of the four principles, two want to get out (only one can articulate to what, and she's hasn't convinced herself), one needs to stay because his only real defining moments were there, and the fourth is a near sociopathic drifter, who meets up with the clueless one who leave smallburg because he doesn't know what else to do. Even this character, Bev (Meg Ryan actually showing range instead of getting rich off Nora Ephron fluff she can walk thru), needs "home" in some way, and convinces clueless Danny to marry her (a great wedding scene; gives new meaning to the word "downscale") and take her to meet his folks. Former star HS athlete Hancock (Jason Gedrick), the one who couldn't leave, has become a cop and is trying to convince ex HS sweetheart Mary (Tracy Pollan) to come back and stay, and she IS conflicted, but ultimately knows she has to get away. It sounds somewhat pedestrian, but it's played to expose more than human frailty, but how we can destroy ourselves and others without ill will. It also, probably unconsciously, shows us a piece of the majority of USA that wasn't getting rich in the 80's, and in fact was struggling with diminished expectations and an increasing gap between the haves and have nots. Tom Wolfe gave us the smarmy pseudo-satire "Bonfires of the Vanities", Michael Hoffman got us a peek at what was and, to some extent, what was to be. The slowly spiralling paths of the characters in Promised Land eventually collide with tragic results. There is no salvation or redemption.-- The End Oh, you want to see Meg Ryan take another chance and come up winners, check out "Hurlyburly" and her small but memorable role in this actors' movie adapted from David Rabe's play.
    9rhackney

    Terrific movie - have watched over and over again many times

    No matter what the critics contend I loved this movie - I like the actors - all of them, not just the top 4. I thought the top 4 should have gotten Oscars. The film is depressing but it is supposed to be that way. The scenery and music just add to the awesomeness. References to President Regan made it more relevant. The despair and frustration of growing up in this movie are not equalled anywhere else. Two thumbs up.

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Referenced in Lawrence Kasdan's Dreamcatcher : L'Attrape-rêves (2003).
    • Quotes

      [waking up the "morning after"]

      Bev: Where's the cat?

      Danny: What cat?

      Bev: The cat that shit in my mouth.

    • Crazy credits
      Best Dog ... Cheetah
    • Connections
      Featured in Celebrated: Meg Ryan (2015)
    • Soundtracks
      O Magnum Mysterium
      Written by Giovanni Palestrina

      Performed by Choir of Kings College Cambridge (as King's College Choir, Cambridge)

      Conducted by Philip Ledger

      Courtesy of EMI Records Limited, 30 Gloucester Place, London W1A IES

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    FAQ19

    • How long is Promised Land?Powered by Alexa

    Details

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    • Release date
      • January 22, 1988 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Gelobtes Land
    • Filming locations
      • Utah, USA
    • Production companies
      • Great American Films Limited Partnership
      • The Oxford Film Company
      • Vestron Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $3,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $316,199
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $31,401
      • Jan 24, 1988
    • Gross worldwide
      • $316,199
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 42m(102 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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