Adrian Grenier stars as Sean McAllister, a successful fashion designer who hasn't seen his family in years. He returns to his hometown for a painstaking family reunion that will take him bac... Read allAdrian Grenier stars as Sean McAllister, a successful fashion designer who hasn't seen his family in years. He returns to his hometown for a painstaking family reunion that will take him back to his past only to rebuild his future.Adrian Grenier stars as Sean McAllister, a successful fashion designer who hasn't seen his family in years. He returns to his hometown for a painstaking family reunion that will take him back to his past only to rebuild his future.
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I thought it was a really good family drama movie.
Excellent casting. All the actors were brilliant in their roles. Great story. Very honest and real. The whole thing feels authentic. Very well paced film and beautifully edited. A well crafted film. Scenes seamlessly blended together.
The art direction looks very genuine. The cinematography brings a voyeuristic feel.
More than you'd expect. Very original.
Highly enjoyable from start to finish. A very thought provoking film. Would love to see more of this fare from this director. The actors were well chosen for their roles. The director really seems to have brought out the best in them. The story was highly realistic and original. No really dull moments or anything.
Totally authentic feel to it. The plot is very well conceived. Highly recommended. A real gem of a movie!
Far More is a simple, unobtrusive family drama which tells the story of successful gay fashion designer Sean McAllister (The often critically underrated Adrian Grenier) who travels back his rural hometown to visit his terminally ill brother Tim (Drew Powell) which forces him to re-live and come to terms with old conflicts from his past. These include his overbearing and unsympathetic Father, Dick, whose primary focus is to win the local bowling tournament (The always excellent Daniel Hugh Kelly) and a bully from his old High School days, whose son is following in his footsteps.
Sean's Nephew Eli (Joshua Rush) is always pestering his Grandpa to ask 'Why did Uncle Sean leave...' while trying to understand the moods and actions of the adults around him, as well as dealing with some issues of his own.
Circling around his dying brothers bedside are various friends and family members who come into conflict with one another. Old friends return to share good times, but find themselves unable to offer any real comfort or deal with the death facing their former teammate. The wife and the nurse disagree over how his brother should be treated - live a little longer but be drugged up the eyeballs on the time, or less drugs, more pain, but live more compos mentis in the moment. Sean very much observes these conflicts from afar as he prepares himself for his brothers imminent demise.
When his Father's bowling teammate is injured, the family name and tournament prize are at stake, which gives Sean a chance to connect with his nephew, reconcile with his Father and for a brief window, to be the son his Dad always envisaged. A brief oasis is found in the midst of a family tragedy with is all too short lived for all concerned.
I called Far More simple and unobtrusive at the beginning of this review. I will qualify that further by saying this is not a drama that seeks to ram a social agenda or message down the throat of the audience. These characters and stories will feel familiar because we have come across them. The small town conflicts that play out between family members and their friends and loved ones will feel familiar to anyone brought up in the small town rural environment of the USA.
As the story progresses it becomes apparent that Sean has unresolved issues that are trapped in his past, and in order to move forward with his present relationship back in New York, he must find a way to confront them in the present. Further light is shed on this narrative through a number of flashbacks to Sean's time at High School, where his brother was the popular athlete but always stood up for his younger brother, who was coming to terms with his homosexuality at the time and often a victim of bullying from his brothers teammates..
Much of the narrative in the present is viewed through the eyes of the Nephew, which I am told took more dominance in the older cut of the movie. It works far more effectively to have him as very much the silent observer rather than being the narrative voice over, much like The Wonder Years. This is primarily a story about a young man, Sean McAllister, coming to terms with the imminent loss of his older brother while finding a way to heal his own wounds through reconnecting with his distant Father.
Far More is the writing / directing debut of talented actress Ally Damian Walker and it's an extremely commendable debut with much to recommend it. The film was previously rush released under the title Sex, Death and Bowling and not to her satisfaction. Wisely, she was allowed to recut the film and it was then re-released it in its present form. Few directs get to tweak their work some six years later but I can assure you, it's something more directors often aspire to do. (Just ask George Lucas)
Far More, might be a small story, but it carries big emotional threads that weaves a dramatic tapestry of conflicts, to anyone who has dealt with the dramas that often come with a large and complex family dynamic. It's beautifully acted and directed and has a number of outstanding performances including an underplayed, but perfectly poised turn from Grenier as Sean, and superb cameos from the likes of Melora Walters (criminally underused here) Selma Blair, Richard Riehle, and Drea De Matteo. The younger cast in the flashback scenes to Sean's time in High School all give solid performances in their scenes.
If the film has a weak spot, then it's in the bowling subplot which while perfectly plausible is occasionally a distraction from some of the superbly underplayed family drama scenes. But it does provide a satisfactory way of tying the story elements together but could have done with an injection of more drama.
Far More is very much a slice of life story, I am certain many will find something relatable in a tale, where the town, setting and characters will feel familiar to all those who grew up in rural USA.
The independent film is the directorial debut of actress/writer Ally Walker known to many as the less than precocious Agent Stahl on FX's Sons of Anarchy.
I won't break down the plot points or include any spoilers (I hate that) but I will tell you most everyone will find a piece of themselves in the themes that weave in and out of the film.
So put on your comfies and spend the evening with these characters as they come full circle while tackling bullying, family estrangement, homophobia, death and ultimately, the meaning of life.
Hint: love is the answer. ;) 🍿🍿🍿🍿🍿
Ok m I would watch anything with Adrian Grenier. He is though part of an ensemble that makes this movie special. This movie is all about going home. Mending fences and rebuilding family ties. The movie is a wonderful diversion from Omicron. You can lose yourself in the p;lot and subplots.
Did you know
- TriviaThis post simply lets viewers know that even though this movie was released in 2021, it was actually filmed in 2014. This lets them know why Joshua Rush's character, Eli, was 11 in the movie, even though Rush himself was 19 or 20 years old at the movies release. Some people have already asked about this apparent disparity.
- GoofsOn the version of the poster which shows Adrian Grenier both coming and going (facing himself), Bailey Chase (Sean's brother, Eli's father) is credited incorrectly as Bailey Rush, which is the last name of the actor who portrays his son Eli, Joshua Rush.
- Quotes
Eli McAllister: [to the bully] I think I'm just staving off the inevitable. At some point you're gonna cream me. But ya know what, Wolf? You're gonna fail .. at everything. And not because you're stupid, but because you're not stupid enough. If you were more stupid, you'd be nicer because being stupid wouldn't bother you. But you're smart enough to know you're stupid. Which makes you mad and scared. Which makes you mean.
Eli McAllister: Any way you look at it, you're screwed.
- Alternate versionsFar More is a remastered version of Sex, Death and Bowling.
- ConnectionsEdited from Sex, Death and Bowling (2015)
- SoundtracksYoung Journey
Written by Spencer Thomson, Thomas Putnam, Trevor Terndrup, Tyler Ritter, Wes Bailey
Performed by Moon Taxi
Courtesy of BMG Chrysalis
- How long is Far More?Powered by Alexa
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- Release date
- Countries of origin
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- Also known as
- Mucho más de lo esperado
- Filming locations
- Fillmore, California, USA(Location stand-in for the fictional town of Farmore, California.)
- Production company
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