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IMDbPro

Goodbye Solo

  • 2008
  • R
  • 1h 31m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
6.2K
YOUR RATING
Goodbye Solo (2008)
Goodbye Solo Trailer
Play trailer2:19
2 Videos
15 Photos
Drama

Two men form an unlikely friendship that will change both of their lives forever.Two men form an unlikely friendship that will change both of their lives forever.Two men form an unlikely friendship that will change both of their lives forever.

  • Director
    • Ramin Bahrani
  • Writers
    • Bahareh Azimi
    • Ramin Bahrani
  • Stars
    • Souleymane Sy Savane
    • Red West
    • Diana Franco Galindo
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.3/10
    6.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ramin Bahrani
    • Writers
      • Bahareh Azimi
      • Ramin Bahrani
    • Stars
      • Souleymane Sy Savane
      • Red West
      • Diana Franco Galindo
    • 58User reviews
    • 96Critic reviews
    • 89Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 9 nominations total

    Videos2

    Goodbye Solo
    Trailer 2:19
    Goodbye Solo
    Goodbye Solo: Original Player
    Clip 0:56
    Goodbye Solo: Original Player
    Goodbye Solo: Original Player
    Clip 0:56
    Goodbye Solo: Original Player

    Photos14

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    Top cast35

    Edit
    Souleymane Sy Savane
    Souleymane Sy Savane
    • Solo
    • (as Souléymane Sy Savané)
    Red West
    Red West
    • William
    Diana Franco Galindo
    • Alex
    Carmen Leyva
    • Quiera
    Lane 'Roc' Williams
    • Roc
    Mamadou Lam
    • Mamadou
    J. Malaak Juuk
    • Motel Janitor
    Jamill 'Peaches' Fowler
    • Pork Chop
    Norman L. Sloan
    • Pharmacist
    Trevor Metscher
    • Ticket Attendant
    Djibril Lo
    • Bank Cab Driver
    Navani Reyes
    • Navani
    Wel Mayom Jok
    • DVD Seller
    Peter N. Anyieth
    • DVD Seller
    Ken Lugen
    • Taxi Cab Employee
    Linda Lindsly
    • Airline Interviewer
    Jim Babel
    Jim Babel
    • Airline Interviewer
    Neill Fleeman
    • Airline Interviewer
    • Director
      • Ramin Bahrani
    • Writers
      • Bahareh Azimi
      • Ramin Bahrani
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews58

    7.36.2K
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    Featured reviews

    10rb545rd

    Best film I saw at Toronto Film Festival

    Without a doubt this was the best film I saw at the Toronto Film Festival. My girlfriend and I decided to make a trip up there for a few days to see some films, enjoy the city and catch Niagara Falls. We saw some good films, and some not-so-good films, but most of them were good... but none of them captivated us like Goodbye Solo. It was on our short list because we had seen and really liked Chop Shop-- by the same director. This one is even better. The lead actor is just amazing!! This guy is going to win some awards. He is so charming that you can't help but want to watch everything he does. The whole audience was laughing for like the first half of the film because him and the old man - the big dawg! - are just so funny together and the things they say and do together are just great... but it was the ending that really got us. My girlfriend was crying. So were a lot of people around us... And the last shots are really beautiful. I don't know where they filmed it, but the location was amazing. The mountain and the trees and fog... it was just amazing how the filmed those colors and fog, like it wasn't real or something. The film really, really moved us and stayed with us for the rest of our trip and we talked about it a lot on our drive home. Solo changed so much in the film... that guy is a great actor. We will see it again when it comes out for sure.
    8fnorful

    Off the Meter

    I saw this in the "Someone to Watch" and "American Independents" sidebars at the 33rd Cleveland International Film Festival.

    Ramin Bahrani's work improves dramatically with this story of a Senegalese cab driver trying to make a life in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. The story arc of his relationship with William, a fare who contracts for a one-way ride a couple of weeks in the future is well-drawn and quite satisfying. All of the prime relationships in this story are deftly developed: Solo's quest to "save" William (from what is clearly a suicide trip), Solo's efforts at providing for his second family (with concomitant tension from Wife #2), the effect of step-daughter (?) Alex on William, William's mystery relationship to the young man selling tickets at the local multi-plex.

    The film was excellent technically. Bahrani likes "dark", yet the framing and focus provide for a nice intimacy with the characters. The "money" scene at the end (not giving away the plot here!) is beautifully framed, raw, elemental, vertigo-inducing without looking down.

    Having not liked Man Push Cart (his first film) I feel that with this movie I have found a middle ground with Bahrani: I cared about the characters and I was told a story. But Bahrani likes mystery. And here there is a lot of mystery, very satisfying mystery. Worth seeing twice (which I did!).
    9maggiepennington362

    Best Film at SXSW!!

    I admit, I was very worried when I saw the trailer for this film that Bahrani had sold out or made his first bad film. I was worried this was going to be something awful like The Legend of Bagger Vance or The Bucket List. Something cheesy, sentimental, or with an angel black man who saves a white man. Thank God none of that was true! The film is sooooooo GOOD! I loved Bahrani's first two films and wish more people had seen them. But this is his best film yet and I am glad it has a wider release! The characters are real, honest, sincere and once again Bahrani manages to avoid all the normal plot devices that ruin films. Compared to Man Push Cart and Chop Shop, Goodbye Solo has a much stronger story-line and is really tense. You always want to know what happens next, but especially the last 30minutes the audience I saw it here at SXSW were rivited. AND-- it is funny! The first half of the film is really funny and I didn't expect that at all! A lot of that is the writing and directing, but a lot is the acting. That guy playing Solo is so charming he has star written all over him. His warmth and personality make the film something really special, especially next to the old man playing William. He is just perfect in the role, as if it was written for him. The movie left me feeling a little sad, but also really strong and hopeful, which sounds weird, but it's true. Its been days since I saw the film, and I saw many others at the festival, some good ones too, but this is the one that stayed with me. It is the best film I have seen all year and I will see it again when it opens in Austin.
    10john-zeigler

    Solo Must-See!!

    I saw CHOP SHOP at the film forum and loved it, so when a friend told me to go see GOODBYE SOLO, I took the recommendation. SOLO was different from what I expected. It was a lot funnier than CHOP SHOP. I laughed so hard, especially in the beginning. Toward the end, things start to get a lot more emotional. It's a life-affirming film with such a subtly of power that it's haunting. Once the film was over and everything sunk in, it stayed with me, even after leaving the theater and into the night. This is proof enough that Ramin Bahrani has made something original and vital. Like in CHOP SHOP, you can feel the soul of these characters. I can't wait to see what he will be working on next. I hope these actors go up for huge awards or make great careers for themselves, and I hope that Bahrani keeps making movies as good and as sublime as this one.
    9rooprect

    The American Dream vs. the American Nightmare

    Two men are in a taxicab. The passenger is a scowling, angry, misanthropic old man. The cabbie is a smiling, exuberant African immigrant. In a few lines of dialogue we learn that the misanthrope wants to be taken to Blowing Rock, North Carolina on the 20th of the month. "Why?" jokes the cabbie, "You gonna jump off?" No reply. The cabbie's glowing smile disappears.

    The poetry of that opening scene is only rivaled by its ability to set a powerful air of suspense that carries through the entire 91-minute film all the way until the last minute. And even though there aren't any flashy car chases, shootouts, steamy sex scenes or fantastical plot twists, "Goodbye Solo" grabs your full attention from start to finish.

    The theme, beautifully set in the opening scene & fleshed out as the story progresses, centers around the duality of the American dream and the American nightmare. The cabbie, relatively new to the USA, loves life and the endless opportunities life presents. He has a job and a family, neither of which are perfect, but they make him happy nonetheless. And he genuinely loves people. The old man is bitter, alone, presumably due to a tragic family meltdown, and he just wants to be left alone. Just as the cabbie is exploring new opportunities, the old man spends his days tying up loose ends: selling his home, closing out his bank accounts, etc. Over the course of 2 weeks or so, we witness the interaction--the philosophical struggle--between these two men, and the suspense of the outcome is maintained until the film's final scene.

    The acting is absolutely 1st class with both men, particularly by the main character "Solo" played by Souléymane Sy Savane in his feature debut. His way of portraying raw optimism and hope is truly worthy of the description Roger Ebert used: "a force of nature". At the same time, it's not over-the-top unbelievable like Pollyanna or some children's fantasy character. He plays an intelligent man fully aware of the struggles in life, yet he has faith in his own determination. And isn't that the key to happiness for all of us? The old man character is the antithesis and equally believable. If you've ever suffered a horrible tragedy you know that sometimes nothing can cut through. Nothing. And that's what we see here: a man so resolute in his cynicism that you'd give up on him in 10 seconds.

    And so, we see the cinematic version of the age-old physics puzzle: what happens when an unstoppable force meets an immovable object?

    The movie takes a quiet, measured pace with plenty of room to breathe. There are gorgeous shots of nature as well as equally haunting views of an empty downtown Winston-Salem at night. Funny, I've driven through that city scores of times on I-95 without giving it a second thought. But next time I think I'll take a small detour and visit. I also need to see this place called Blowing Rock to find out if it's real. The view from up there looks like something Count Dracula would see looking out over the misty mountains of Transylvania.

    There aren't many popular films to compare this to, but I'd say if you liked the British film "Happy Go-Lucky" or the indie film "This Is Martin Bonner" or the Japanese "Shiki-Jitsu" (Ritual) or even Kurosawa's cinematic masterpiece "Ikiru" (To Live), then don't hesitate to see "Goodbye Solo".

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Bahrain said in an interview that his script was inspired by Le Goût de la cerise (1997) by Abbas Kiarostami.
    • Goofs
      The protagonist's taxi is shown on the Linville Viaduct. This is not on the route between Blowing Rock and Winston-Salem.
    • Quotes

      Solo: William. William, are you awake?

      William: No.

    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Monsters VS. Aliens/Spinning into Butter/The Education of Charlie Banks/Goodbye Solo/Adventureland (2009)
    • Soundtracks
      Tonto
      Performed by Bachata con Sentido

      Written by Henry Gonzalez

      Publisher: Juanco Music (BMI) Adm. by Sunflower Entertainment Co., Inc.

      Courtesy of Sunflower Entertainment Co., Inc.

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    FAQ21

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 9, 2009 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Facebook
      • MySpace
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
      • Wolof
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Solo
    • Filming locations
      • Blowing Rock, North Carolina, USA
    • Production companies
      • Gigantic Pictures
      • ITVS International
      • Lucky Hat Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $870,781
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $38,042
      • Mar 29, 2009
    • Gross worldwide
      • $942,209
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 31m(91 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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