Plagued by bad influences, bad choices and bad people, Miles finds himself in a seemingly hopeless set of circumstances. When a beautiful friend with an equally beautiful spirit shows him ho... Read allPlagued by bad influences, bad choices and bad people, Miles finds himself in a seemingly hopeless set of circumstances. When a beautiful friend with an equally beautiful spirit shows him how to find his faith, Miles learns to trust a force greater than himself to face and overco... Read allPlagued by bad influences, bad choices and bad people, Miles finds himself in a seemingly hopeless set of circumstances. When a beautiful friend with an equally beautiful spirit shows him how to find his faith, Miles learns to trust a force greater than himself to face and overcome impossible odds.
- Awards
- 1 win total
- Maddie
- (as Amy Correa)
- Guy hitting on Maddie
- (as Max Crumm)
- Chester Brown
- (as Jerome A. Hawkins)
- Eva
- (as Michelle Liberman)
- Ann
- (as Melonie Mazman)
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- Writer
- All cast & crew
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Featured reviews
I don't know how to describe the move to do it justice. This is an in-your-face movie about life in the real world for far too many kids and the tragedy that can so innocently befall them. Surprisingly, the movie is also about hope. This movie will test your limits of decency, but that is what it sets out to do. It must do that because life does that and all too often, we turn away and hide from the reality that lurks just around the corner. This is a raw, gritty look at a life that most of us will never see in person.
I saw this movie at the Palm Beach International Film Festival and was fortunate enough to meet some of the cast. They were funny and yet sincere in describing their experiences in making this movie. They talked about going into the streets and getting "up close and personal" in order to make the characters real. They succeeded in bringing the story to life and giving it meaning in a way that I've never experienced before.
Be prepared - the beginning is VERY uncomfortable. If you stick it out, you won't be disappointed.
In the best acting performance I've seen this year, Hodges infuses his character with heartbreaking vulnerability. Miles's silent cries ring out loud and clear as he becomes mired in a world of self-destructive behavior and predatory "friends." Like so many lost youths who fall prey to gangs, he finds a "family" in the form a manipulative clique of street-hustlers. Soon he finds himself employed by the group's mother hen, Keisha, a sleazy pimp who entices the fragile soul with sexual favors and false promises of a better life. Keisha is played excellently by Tasha Smith, a beautiful, statuesque actress/model showing tremendous skill in her first major role.
In an inspired move, filmmaker Hodges gives the often-despondent Miles a voice through narrations delivered by an unhinged alter ego. Hodges, adopting a Dennis Rodman-like appearance, speaks as the equivalent of a devil on Miles' shoulder in unsettling fantasy sequences dispersed throughout the movie. This provides insight into the conflicted emotions that Miles cannot or will not openly express.
An unexpected glimmer of hope comes via Natasha (Meagan Good, who also co-produced the film), a free-spirited college student two years his senior. Good more than fulfills the promise of her auspicious turn at 16 in the 1997 masterpiece "Eve's Bayou" as she breaks from the femme-fatale persona she has acquired in recent years. She plays Natasha as an effusive and initially elfish character who pushes her way into the Miles's life and gives him what he least expects and most needs: a true friend. Natasha is complex mix of flower-child idealism (reminiscent of Goldie Hawn in 1972's "Butterflies Are Free"), unyielding faith in God and the power of prayer, as well as a longing for companionship.
During a Q&A after the screening, Hodges mentioned that Good sought the project to show her ability to stretch from her sexy on screen image. And stretch she does. Her performance is nothing short of a revelation. The same goes for the film and especially the multi-talented Hodges.
Here's hoping that "Miles from Home" not only finds an audience but the legion of admirers it most certainly deserves.
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Details
- Runtime1 hour 37 minutes
- Color