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Ballast

  • 2008
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 36m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
2.5K
YOUR RATING
Ballast (2008)
This is the theatrical trailer for Ballast, directed by Lance Hammer.
Play trailer1:48
1 Video
77 Photos
Drama

A drama set in the Mississippi delta, where one man's suicide affects three people's lives.A drama set in the Mississippi delta, where one man's suicide affects three people's lives.A drama set in the Mississippi delta, where one man's suicide affects three people's lives.

  • Director
    • Lance Hammer
  • Writer
    • Lance Hammer
  • Stars
    • Micheal J. Smith Sr.
    • JimMyron Ross
    • Tarra Riggs
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    2.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Lance Hammer
    • Writer
      • Lance Hammer
    • Stars
      • Micheal J. Smith Sr.
      • JimMyron Ross
      • Tarra Riggs
    • 21User reviews
    • 61Critic reviews
    • 84Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 17 wins & 21 nominations total

    Videos1

    Ballast: Theatrical Trailer
    Trailer 1:48
    Ballast: Theatrical Trailer

    Photos77

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    Top cast35

    Edit
    Micheal J. Smith Sr.
    Micheal J. Smith Sr.
    • Lawrence
    JimMyron Ross
    JimMyron Ross
    • James
    Tarra Riggs
    Tarra Riggs
    • Marlee
    Johnny McPhail
    Johnny McPhail
    • John
    Ventress Bonner
    • Teen
    Jimez Alexander
    • Teen
    Jean Paul Guillory
    • Teen
    Marcus Alexander
    • Teen
    Marquice Alexander
    • Teen
    Lawrence Jackson
    • Teen
    Jeremy Jordan
    Jeremy Jordan
    • Paramedic
    Steve Cabell
    • Paramedic
    Sam Dobbins
    Sam Dobbins
    • Ambulance Driver
    Neil Pettigrew
    • Dispatcher
    • (voice)
    Sanjib Shrestha
    • Dr. Shrestha
    • (as Dr. Sanjib Shrestha)
    Carol Clark
    • Nurse
    Lee G. Beck
    • Nurse
    Michael Johnston
    • Nurse
    • Director
      • Lance Hammer
    • Writer
      • Lance Hammer
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews21

    6.92.4K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    9howard.schumann

    Conveys a sense of immediacy that gathers momentum as the film progresses

    Winner of cinematography and director awards at the Sundance Film Festival and nominated for the Jury Prize at Sundance and Berlin, Lance Hammer's Ballast is an American original. Performed by non-professional actors and shot with a hand-held camera, the film looks at the lives of three distraught people in the Mississippi Delta, conveying with passion their ability to discover their own humanity and transcend the circumstances of their life. Using only the ambient sounds of nature, and portraying events in an elliptical manner that forces us to fill in the blanks, Ballast is reminiscent of the minimalist masterpieces of the Dardennes' and Charles Burnett, but has a unique rhythm all its own.

    Shot on 35 mm along the Mississippi Delta, it is a film that quickly establishes mood and suspense and creates an emotional range that travels from anger and sadness to hope and joy. As the film opens, 12 year-old James (JimMyron Ross) chases a flock of birds in an open cotton field during the winter. The camera then shifts to a distraught man, Lawrence (Michael J. Smith, Sr.) sitting alone in his living room in the house next to his sister-in-law, Marlee (Tarra Riggs). The man is paralyzed with depression and unable to communicate due to the death of his brother Darius who, as discovered by a neighbor John (Johnny McPhail), has died in his bed of a self-inflicted overdose. Sullenly, Lawrence responds to the tragedy by going outside and shooting himself in the lungs. Rushed to the hospital, he is badly wounded but recovers after several weeks in the hospital.

    In trouble with dope dealers, young James keeps his working mother from discovering that he owes $100 for crack cocaine, but it is revealed when James' TV is taken by the gang and both mother and son are assaulted in their cars. James, who owns a scooter, rides to Lawrence's place and demands his father's money at gunpoint. Things seem to hit rock bottom when Marlee is fired from her job cleaning toilets and Lawrence, still in shock, is unable to reopen his small food market. With nowhere to go but up, the three begin a long process of discovery of their indelible connection to life and to each other.

    Unfolding like a documentary, Ballast conveys a sense of immediacy and a lyricism that gathers momentum as the film progresses. Accents are difficult to fathom (the film wisely provides English subtitles), yet there is a naturalism and authenticity here that keeps us engaged throughout. While none of the actors have ever acted before, you would not know it from the power of their performances, especially from Tarra Riggs and young Ross. It is a film, however, that definitely requires patience from the viewer. There are no markers to tell us what we are supposed to feel about the people we see on the screen, yet we remain tuned in to their struggles as if they were our own and in many respects they are. As they discover that who they are is larger than their circumstances, we discover a similar truth in our own life.
    may-25

    Ignore the negative comments here, this film is amazing.

    If I want to spend a few hours out of my day to get to a cinema and spend my money to watch a film, any film, then I want it to be worthwhile. Believe me, Ballast I would have paid for twice, it's that good. And I'll be buying the DVD too.

    During the Glasgow Film Festival this year, this (to us) obscure, indie film played at a multiplex and my husband - who actually met the director at the London Film Festival - urged me to see it. Why? Because I'm also a filmmaker, so I share with the director, Lance, the desire to eschew the commercial imperative when it comes to telling straight stories.

    Lance, if you read this - I adored this film. It's everything - flaws and all - that I want to see on screen. The integrity of the cast, no matter where you found them, the screen craft - the photography, script, design, sound, edit, costume, makeup - or judicious lack of - all fell into place. It's what they say about making films - so many get made, but so seldom do the planets align to make a beautiful one. This to me is the bomb. I love it.

    I wish you every success in your future projects.

    May Miles Thomas, Elemental Films, UK
    8rasecz

    Finely directed modern American drama

    This is very much a modern American drama. Though issues such as drugs, gangs, broken family relations, violent poorly managed schools, unemployment, and financial breakdowns play a role in steering the lives of the principal characters, the primary emotion is sorrow. The suicide of a twin brother is the trigger that brings three characters -- the brother of the victim, the ex-wife and son -- to clash.

    Given the fine performances of the three principals and the supporting cast, it is hard to believe that those roles are played by non-professionals. The director picked them from the local population, deep in the Mississippi Delta. Certainly there is talent here, the woman especially. But credit is due to the director who expertly calibrated the acting, mixing the right doses of melancholy, anger and disappointment. The same can be said of the environment. The wintry landscape with its scattered naked trees, resting agricultural land, and gray skies add to a sense of continual sadness.

    Thankfully the director spared us from a musical track. The sounds are natural. The light as much. The plot linear. The Dogma rulebook applied.

    The end is abrupt. The beginning is almost as abrupt. The past can be guessed. The future is an open question as it carries conflicting emotions. How you choose to continue the story in your mind depends on whether you are an optimist or a pessimist.
    6ArizWldcat

    Impressive quiet drama

    We saw this at Sundance 2008, and found it to be deliberately slow, but also quite thoughtful as it told the story of a man whose twin brother's suicide devastates him. The story extends to the dead man's ex wife and son and explores the aftermath of the suicide and its effects on these three characters. What makes this film impressive is that the actors involved in almost every role had never acted before. The director revealed to us at the Q&A session that he had gone to churches in the Mississippi Delta and recruited people to be in his film. Also notable is the sound, or lack thereof. Instead of a busy, noisy soundtrack, this was a quiet film with very little music, relying instead on the ambient noise of the area in which it was filmed. We enjoyed the film and wish the director and the actors much success.
    8timmy_501

    Carefully crafted character study

    I first became interested in Ballast when I heard about its setting: it's very rare to find a film set in the Mississippi Delta. It's also quite rare to find a serious drama with mostly black characters. I was afraid that this would either be a sappy melodrama or an attempt to make some "profound" point about how racism exists and is, like, bad and stuff. Thus I was quite pleased to find that this film manages to have a uniquely Southern setting without resorting to clichés or caricatures and that making some grand social statement is evidently the last thing on the mind of first time director Lance Hammer. Instead, we have a deliberately paced character study with a nicely handled mise en scene.

    The film opens with the attempted suicide of Lawrence, a shopkeeper distressed over the (extremely) recent death of his twin brother/partner/only friend. Lawrence's recovery is complicated by his brother's will which indicates that the recently deceased man's ex-wife and teenage son are entitled to his share of the store and part of the property the brothers had co-habitated. Things start off tense due to the boy's involvement with some disreputable older boys that he owes money and stay that way due to Lawrence's troubled partnership with the boy's mother. This is a quiet, contemplative film for the most part and it offers no easy resolutions. Instead, it manages to realistically capture some unique characters in a woefully ignored section of American society.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Micheal J. Smith Sr. (who plays Lawrence) had to be persuaded to make the film as he had no interest in such things. In real life, he works for the Public Services Commission in Yazoo City, Mississippi and was discovered attending his local church.
    • Connections
      Referenced in Film Junk Podcast: Episode 245: Fantastic Mr. Fox (2009)
    • Soundtracks
      I'll Wait For Jesus
      Traditional

      Arranged by Clora T. Handy & Ann Nichols

      Performed by The Canton Gospel Chorus

      Courtesy of Talk of the Town Records

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 19, 2008 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Балласт
    • Filming locations
      • Mississippi, USA
    • Production company
      • Alluvial Film Company
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $700,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $77,556
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $8,572
      • Oct 5, 2008
    • Gross worldwide
      • $81,864
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 36m(96 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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