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IMDbPro

The Lucky Ones

  • 2008
  • R
  • 1h 55m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
15K
YOUR RATING
The Lucky Ones (2008)
This is the theatrical trailer for The Lucky Ones, directed by  Neil Burger.
Play trailer2:30
16 Videos
36 Photos
AdventureComedyDramaRomanceWar

Three different soldiers - a woman and two men - return from war and facing the peaceful life's problems of each other.Three different soldiers - a woman and two men - return from war and facing the peaceful life's problems of each other.Three different soldiers - a woman and two men - return from war and facing the peaceful life's problems of each other.

  • Director
    • Neil Burger
  • Writers
    • Neil Burger
    • Dirk Wittenborn
  • Stars
    • Rachel McAdams
    • Tim Robbins
    • Michael Peña
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    15K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Neil Burger
    • Writers
      • Neil Burger
      • Dirk Wittenborn
    • Stars
      • Rachel McAdams
      • Tim Robbins
      • Michael Peña
    • 46User reviews
    • 54Critic reviews
    • 53Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos16

    The Lucky Ones: Trailer
    Trailer 2:30
    The Lucky Ones: Trailer
    The Lucky Ones
    Clip 0:34
    The Lucky Ones
    The Lucky Ones
    Clip 0:34
    The Lucky Ones
    The Lucky Ones
    Clip 0:46
    The Lucky Ones
    The Lucky Ones
    Clip 1:45
    The Lucky Ones
    The Lucky Ones
    Clip 1:00
    The Lucky Ones
    The Lucky Ones
    Clip 0:30
    The Lucky Ones

    Photos36

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    Top cast76

    Edit
    Rachel McAdams
    Rachel McAdams
    • Colee
    Tim Robbins
    Tim Robbins
    • Cheaver
    Michael Peña
    Michael Peña
    • TK
    Molly Hagan
    Molly Hagan
    • Pat Cheaver
    Mark L. Young
    Mark L. Young
    • Scott Cheaver
    Howard Platt
    Howard Platt
    • Stan Tilson
    Arden Myrin
    Arden Myrin
    • Barbara Tilson
    Coburn Goss
    Coburn Goss
    • Peter Tilson
    John Heard
    John Heard
    • Bob
    Jennifer Joan Taylor
    Jennifer Joan Taylor
    • Bob's Wife
    Katherine LaNasa
    Katherine LaNasa
    • Janet
    Leo Ford
    • Janet's Husband
    Susan Yeagley
    Susan Yeagley
    • Kendra
    Emily Swallow
    Emily Swallow
    • Brandi
    John Diehl
    John Diehl
    • Tom Klinger
    Annie Corley
    Annie Corley
    • Jeanie Klinger
    Katie Korby
    • Shannon
    Kirk B.R. Woller
    Kirk B.R. Woller
    • Army Psychologist
    • Director
      • Neil Burger
    • Writers
      • Neil Burger
      • Dirk Wittenborn
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews46

    6.814.7K
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    Featured reviews

    8mr_popcorn

    an awesome quirky little film.

    Neil Burger's offbeat, quirky, dramatic movie is a triumph. It succeeds in all the aspects, from the technical parts to the acting, I can't find a single negative thing about it. Burger doesn't dilly-dally around, he went straight to the point of his subject, giving a fair amount of time for each of the three characters (McAdams, Pena and Robbins) to develop and eventually you can't help but really like them...a lot. Especially McAdams but more on that later. The script is tightly wound, the chemistry between the three protagonists doesn't seem forced, the movie doesn't force you to like them the moment the movie starts but instead, these colorful characters will gradually grow on you.

    Tim Robbins, one of my favorite actors, doesn't disappoint. 2008, I have seen him in two movies the other one being The City of Ember. And as long as a movie has Tim Robbins in it, I'm sold. That's why I watched the movie in the first place. Michael Pena, another great guy, gives off a good vibe towards the movie and once you know what's been bothering his character, you can't help but laugh at how one-sided and ridiculous his problem is. Pena gives one of his greatest performance on screen. And of course, the belle of the ball, the star of the show, Rachel McAdams gives a quirky, zesty and joyful performance as a lovable Southerner and I can't help but be reminded of another quirky, zesty and joyful character, Amelie. She just keeps the laughs rolling in and steal every scene she's in. She gives the character such depth that one might come off as one dimensional had it been portrayed by a lesser talent. Definitely an underrated performance for 2008.

    Highly recommended.
    8the-movie-guy

    Our soldiers deserve more than a Thank You when they return home

    (Synopsis) After recovering from their wounds in the Iraq War, three soldiers are sent back to the United States. Sgt. T.K. Poole (Michael Pena) and Pvt. Colee Dunn (Rachel McAdams) are given a 30-day leave, and Sgt. Fred Cheever (Tim Robbins) is retiring. The three soldiers now have a new mission. T.K is going home to visit his fiancée, Colee is going to return a guitar to the family of the man who saved her life, and Fred is going home to his wife in St. Louis. When they arrive at JFK Airport in New York, all fights have been canceled, because of a blackout. The three decide to rent a van and drive to St. Louis, and once there, T.K. and Colee can catch a plane to Las Vegas. What started out to be a short 14 hour trip ends up being a journey across America. Along the way, the three soldiers who had just met at JFK, become close friends.

    (My Comment) This is a human interest story that explores the interpersonal aspects that war has on our soldiers, especially the ones who are injured as they return home. We learn the pitfalls of returning to this country where our soldiers are only given a token "Thank You" platitude from the public. We also see how three soldiers band together, and become in a sense a family taking care of one another. The film gives enough time in the character development of each soldier that we begin to like each soldier, and you wouldn't mind making them your friends. Their cross-county road trip is full of foolish misadventures that are memorable. For the most part, the film is serious to a point, yet it is also a comedy. I believe this small film will be one of those sleeper movies that the public will like, and it could be a hit. (QED International, Run Time 1:55, Rated R) (8/10)
    8moviewaffle

    Underrated gem

    I'd never heard of Neil Burger's "The Lucky Ones" until a friend recommended it to me after catching it on a flight to Australia. Released in theatres stateside last year, it was pulled after making a paltry $267,000 in its opening week. This is a hell of a shame as what we have here is the first great movie about the Iraq war. Three soldiers return to the states on leave and through circumstances end up on a road trip to Vegas. Michael Pena is a cocky Sargeant with a wound in his manhood, struggling to come to terms with how his Fiancé will react to his impotence. Tim Robbins is a veteran trying to find the money to send his kid to college and thus stop him enlisting. But the standout performance, and quite possibly the standout performance of the past year full stop, comes from Rachel McAdams as a naive private returning her dead boyfriends guitar to his family. Her turn here is far superior to anything Oscar nominated this year and probably the best from an American actress since Hilary Swank in Million Dollar Baby. The films strongest point is its lack of a "message". Pro war or Anti war, you'll find your own point of view here and Burger is subtle enough to allow you the privilege. I won't give it away but this has a great ambiguous seventies style ending, just the way I like 'em. It's always a good sign when a movie ends and you wish you could get to see more of the characters, and it's an all too rare occurrence in modern cinema. For this Burger and his cast should be applauded.
    MacAindrais

    Here's to being Lucky

    The Lucky Ones (2008) ***1/2

    Here's a fact: movies about the current war in Iraq have done about as well as... well, the current war in Iraq. To be fair, none of them have really been great. Even Tommy Lee Jones' In the Valley of Elah did not manage well financially, though it did manage to get half decent reception from critics. Understandably most of the films have been pretty heavy handed, and just as understandably, audiences have been satiating those taste buds with other, less controversial and subjects. But then comes along The Lucky Ones, starring Tim Robbins, Michael Pena, and Rachael McAdams. The film is about 3 soldiers returning home from Iraq; two on leave for 30 days, the other out for good. Instead of sticking to the usual downbeat tones of other Iraq films, it's more of a hopeful charmer and quite a funny one too. It's really more of a good old fashioned American road movie with soldiers than a war movie. But that didn't stop people from not going. The film got only limited release through 2008, despite gaining fans on the festival circuit.

    Three soldiers return home from Iraq after meeting each other on the plane ride. When they arrive on American soil to catch their connecting flights, they discover that the airport is backed up solid due to a black out. Rather than wait around, Cheaver (Robbins) decides he's close enough to his home in St. Louis to rent a car and drive. TK and Colee (Pena and McAdams) decide they should join him. They're both heading to Las Vegas and figure they can probably make the drive and catch a flight out of St. Louis by the time they would here.

    Colee is heading to Vegas to return her boyfriend's vintage guitar to his family. He died in the war. TK is heading to Vegas for some professional help before he meets up with his fiancé. Hookers and strippers? Colee inquires. Kind of - but not for the usual reasons. You see, they all have wounds, but some more sensitive than others. Cheaver injured his back in a not so heroic way, but he's more amused and relieved about it than embarrassed. Colee's been shot in the leg, and sports an unhealed wound and a limp. TK gets the best of both their worlds: he's been wounded by shrapnel in a not so public area. Now, as he says, it doesn't work right. He's going to Vegas to meet with some "professionals" to test his own little soldier out. "I can't go back to my fiancé without knowing it works, we'd have nothing to talk about!" A strange predicament for two people about to be married.

    Cheaver, being the oldest in his 40s, is usually something of a father figure to the younger TK and Colee. On their trip those two first bicker before becoming closer. Colee openly talks about her late ex, and tells the tales he told her of robbing a Casino in Vegas to pay off his loan shark debts. TK responds with coldness and ridicules the dead man for his character. It results, inevitably in having to pull over and the keys inevitably being locked in the car.

    The Lucky One's certainly doesn't go anywhere we really don't expect it to, but the paths it takes to get there aren't necessarily always the one's we expect. For example, given how quickly the trio arrive in St. Louis, it's obvious something will have to happen to keep it going. It's no big surprise to reveal that his wife wants a divorce, though she apparently is not cheating on him. Meanwhile their son breaks the big news that he got into Stanford, but needs 20 grand to secure his spot. So Cheaver decides he'll go to visit his brother or maybe even go to Vegas and win the money. That guitar Colee carries around is actually even worth 20 grand, though he doesn't want it, and she has to give it to her dead boyfriends family. She wants to give it to him but obviously knows she can't, although what she knows about her dead boyfriend seems to be less and less as time goes on.

    The movie is populated with the usual oddball characters and chance encounters you find on cross country road trips, or in cross country road trip movies. There's a stop over at a church where they meet a very wealthy parishioner who invites them to a party, where among other things they encounter a young man against the war, another man who thinks after meeting the trio there's a good reason why they're losing the war, and a horny wife with the hots for the old Cheaver. Elsewhere they encounter the usual road side bars and motels, traveling sex workers and a rogue Tornado. And of course, along the way each confronts their own issues and demons.

    The Lucky Ones is a funny and winning little movie. It's above all else a very human movie. The characters are what makes it succeed, not it's story. All three leads give wonderful and sincere performances, particularly McAdams as Colee. She's naive but not unintelligent, and tough but still vulnerable.

    What could have been a downer filled with cheap shots and cheap tactics is instead smart and even handed, and above all respectful. That's not to say that it's necessarily a "safe" movie - but then again a movie that's best described as a road comedy about Iraq Veterans probably cannot be. It's above all else a very human movie. The characters are what makes it succeed, not it's story. All three leads give wonderful and sincere performances, particularly McAdams as Colee. She's naive but not unintelligent, and tough but still vulnerable. The movie ends as the soldiers' leave expires and they must return. At least for now they've been the lucky ones. Here's to hoping they stayed lucky.
    7HotToastyRag

    'The Best Years of Our Lives' remake

    Did you have any idea that The Best Years of Our Lives was remade in 2007? I didn't either until I was actually watching the movie and figuring out the similarities. The Lucky Ones is a very good film, but unfortunately, hardly anyone has even heard of it. Don't expect a literal remake, though. This one won't make you cry, and it won't change your life, but it is a modern tribute.

    Instead of three veterans returning from WWII, the three leads are coming home from Iraq. Tim Robbins is the Frederic March equivalent, an older family man who has to adjust to his relationship with his wife and college-aged child. Michael Pena is the injured party, but instead of missing hands, he has damaged another part of his anatomy that makes him feel like less of a man. And instead of Dana Andrews, there's Rachel McAdams, who's looking for her boyfriend's family (instead of Dana looking for his wife). Just like in the original, they start off with mixed feelings about coming back, and after their homecomings don't go well, they meet up again and help each other through their struggles. It does deviate quite a bit from The Best Years of Our Lives, though, so don't hold it against me that I called it a remake. It's as close to a remake as we're going to get, since the modern time has changed quite a bit from the 1940s. I really like it though, and I own a DVD copy.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Emily Swallow's debut.
    • Goofs
      When TK is at the airport bar in Las Vegas the bartender refills his old fashioned glass with a (generous) shot of tequila. She fills the glass almost halfway full. He takes a slug from the glass and puts it down but in the next shot it's more than half full.
    • Quotes

      [Colee finally feels T.K's penis work for the first time]

      Colee Dunn: Is it working?

      T.K. Poole: What?

      Colee Dunn: Is it working?

      T.K. Poole: As a matter of fact, yeah, its working pretty good right now.

      Colee Dunn: That's great!

      Colee Dunn: [Colee hugs T.K. when she feels his penis working] Uh, yeah, okay. Yep, that's working. Um... that's great. Ahh. Wow. We should get out.

    • Crazy credits
      Honey wagon driver - Gary Suckahosee
    • Connections
      Features America's Got Talent (2006)
    • Soundtracks
      Talented
      Written and Performed by Sourcerer

      Published by Neenoon Tunes (ASCAP) / Pick 'n Sing (BMI)

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    FAQ18

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 26, 2008 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • Bahrain
    • Official site
      • Official site (United States)
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Return
    • Filming locations
      • Bolingbrook, Illinois, USA
    • Production companies
      • Lionsgate
      • Roadside Attractions
      • QED International
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $15,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $266,967
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $183,088
      • Sep 28, 2008
    • Gross worldwide
      • $287,567
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 55 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby
      • DTS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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