Boulevard
- 2014
- Tous publics
- 1h 28m
IMDb RATING
5.8/10
9.4K
YOUR RATING
A devoted husband in a marriage of convenience is forced to confront his secret life.A devoted husband in a marriage of convenience is forced to confront his secret life.A devoted husband in a marriage of convenience is forced to confront his secret life.
- Awards
- 2 nominations total
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
I watched this as a streaming movie on Amazon. Good movie for the patient, it is very likely Williams' last movie role, filmed just a bit over a year before he took his own life.
Robin Williams is Nashville banker Nolan Mack, 60, and long time married to the woman he loves. He is very organized and reliable, and in fact watches over his very sick dad who is in a medical facility. His boss at work tells him, after 25 years at that branch, the big boss is considering him for a branch manager job at a different location.
But he has been carrying a secret since he was 12, in his own nature he is homosexual. As we meet him he and his wife have different bedrooms in their nice upper-middle class home, they show kind affection and profess love for each other but mostly live two separate lives. They talk about going on a cruise but his heart doesn't seem to be in it.
Everything changes for Nolan when he makes a U-turn on the boulevard on his way from home and almost runs over a young man, a street hustler. Nolan is mysteriously and calmly attracted to him. They end up going to a seedy place, the hustler offers sex for money but Nolan isn't interested in that, he just wants to visit and talk. Eventually Nolan attempts to get the young man some work at a restaurant, and discussed his going to school, all in vain. Is Nolan trying to be the father that he had needed when he was a young man, struggling with his own homosexuality?
Williams is great in a difficult role within a difficult subject. His character here reminded me some of his character "Sy the photo guy" in "One Hour Photo". Robin Williams was a very funny guy but I think he did his best work in dramatic roles. He really was one of the best actors of my generation.
Robin Williams is Nashville banker Nolan Mack, 60, and long time married to the woman he loves. He is very organized and reliable, and in fact watches over his very sick dad who is in a medical facility. His boss at work tells him, after 25 years at that branch, the big boss is considering him for a branch manager job at a different location.
But he has been carrying a secret since he was 12, in his own nature he is homosexual. As we meet him he and his wife have different bedrooms in their nice upper-middle class home, they show kind affection and profess love for each other but mostly live two separate lives. They talk about going on a cruise but his heart doesn't seem to be in it.
Everything changes for Nolan when he makes a U-turn on the boulevard on his way from home and almost runs over a young man, a street hustler. Nolan is mysteriously and calmly attracted to him. They end up going to a seedy place, the hustler offers sex for money but Nolan isn't interested in that, he just wants to visit and talk. Eventually Nolan attempts to get the young man some work at a restaurant, and discussed his going to school, all in vain. Is Nolan trying to be the father that he had needed when he was a young man, struggling with his own homosexuality?
Williams is great in a difficult role within a difficult subject. His character here reminded me some of his character "Sy the photo guy" in "One Hour Photo". Robin Williams was a very funny guy but I think he did his best work in dramatic roles. He really was one of the best actors of my generation.
The fact that it is / was the last film of Williams add something to the viewing itself. I am not completely familiar with his death, so I can not really say how - maybe - this movie fits into his last months of life...But I can see that some stories can unfold something deeply hidden in someone and make an explosion.
This is a good drama. Williams is very believable in his role. It does feel genuine and somehow fits him good.
Someone wrote that the film is predictable.Well, for me, at least, I did not see that kind of an ending. I am not sure if I expected a happy ending with the boy, but... I am happy that my predictions ( whatever they were) did not come true.
Somehow, the slow pace of the movie and kinda darker colors / cinematography reminded me of the 60's and 70's and that added something moody, melancholic to the movie which I liked.
Seven from me.
This is a good drama. Williams is very believable in his role. It does feel genuine and somehow fits him good.
Someone wrote that the film is predictable.Well, for me, at least, I did not see that kind of an ending. I am not sure if I expected a happy ending with the boy, but... I am happy that my predictions ( whatever they were) did not come true.
Somehow, the slow pace of the movie and kinda darker colors / cinematography reminded me of the 60's and 70's and that added something moody, melancholic to the movie which I liked.
Seven from me.
Nolan Mack (Robin Williams) is a stiff banker married to Joy (Kathy Baker). They seem devoted but he's been a closeted homosexual for all of his adult life. His father is in a nursing home. His best friend Winston (Bob Odenkirk) has a young girlfriend. He is being primed to be the manager of a new bank branch. One night, he cruises a boulevard and runs over male-prostitute Leo. He tries to take care of Leo who is under the thumb of his pimp Eddie.
Robin Williams does a good job. There is a neediness in Nolan that is both off-putting and compelling. The story is almost quaint by today's standard. The problem is that he could come out to everybody and there wouldn't be any damage. Times have basically passed by this movie. Ten years ago, this would be edgy. Today, his homosexuality could actually help in his banking job. It would probably be a relief to Joy to let the secret out into the open and Winston would throw him a party.
Robin Williams does a good job. There is a neediness in Nolan that is both off-putting and compelling. The story is almost quaint by today's standard. The problem is that he could come out to everybody and there wouldn't be any damage. Times have basically passed by this movie. Ten years ago, this would be edgy. Today, his homosexuality could actually help in his banking job. It would probably be a relief to Joy to let the secret out into the open and Winston would throw him a party.
This film tells the story of a seemingly happy sixty year old man, with a decent job and a lovely wife. A random encounter makes him reevaluate his life priorities, and he decides to shred his lies and lives the life he really wants.
As one of Robin Williams' final films, I'm so glad that "Boulevard" shines in just about every aspect, namely Robin Williams' performance, the plot and the brilliant production. The story is subtle but perfectly portrays the complex psychological battle that Nolan goes through. He's a man who is lonely, and yet he seeks attention from the wrong person, as in a person whose love is for rent. The final showdown between Nolan and Joy is very touching, because I feel for both Nolan and Joy.
"Boulevard" tells a very engaging story about a man finally coming to terms with his inner turmoil. I hope more people will have a chance to watch it, because Nolan's story is actually not uncommon in real life.
As one of Robin Williams' final films, I'm so glad that "Boulevard" shines in just about every aspect, namely Robin Williams' performance, the plot and the brilliant production. The story is subtle but perfectly portrays the complex psychological battle that Nolan goes through. He's a man who is lonely, and yet he seeks attention from the wrong person, as in a person whose love is for rent. The final showdown between Nolan and Joy is very touching, because I feel for both Nolan and Joy.
"Boulevard" tells a very engaging story about a man finally coming to terms with his inner turmoil. I hope more people will have a chance to watch it, because Nolan's story is actually not uncommon in real life.
It's been nearly a year since we lost Robin Williams to a long-standing bout of depression that eventually led to his suicide. This led to an enormous outcry of grief all over the celebrity and social media world from those who had grown up on his movies, television and standup and caused many to reflect on this talent that we had perhaps taken for granted. No one can deny that his movies weren't always diamonds, but his work in them was almost always admirable and memorable. The fact that he spent the last couple of years of his life giving great performances in terrible little-seen direct to VOD films ("The Angriest Man In Brooklyn", "A Merry Friggin' Christmas"), with the occasional cameo in something truly awful ("The Big Wedding"), is a rather tragic thought. But fortunately, with Dito Montiel's newly released film Boulevard, Williams goes out strong, if not quite on top. Williams plays Nolan, a man who's stuck in your typical indie-film marriage, i.e. loveless. He's friendly and cordial with his wife, but is clearly missing something vital. One night he's driving home and spots a group of gay hookers on the sidewalk and after nearly accidentally running one over, he befriends him and starts to confront his closeted homosexuality. He gets advice from his friend Winston, played by Bob Odenkirk, who brings all the levity and spontaneity that you'd hope for from the guy who plays Saul Goodman in a role that could have felt a tad superfluous. He's clearly only in the movie to give Nolan a person off which to bounce his thoughts, but with an actor like Odenkirk in the role, it's hard to complain about such matters. If you feel like you've seen this film before, you probably have. We've seen this suburbia set-up many times over the last couple of decades, so when a film goes for this, you really have to count on strong performances and interesting surprises to make it worth your while. Thanks to Williams' tender, vulnerable, aching performance, the film always stays on the side of watchable, and often fascinating. An electronic synthesizer score often tends to call too much attention to itself and distract from the fine performances by not just Williams, but also Roberto Aguire as Leo, the young man whom Nolan befriends. Fortunately though, once the film firmly establishes what it's about, such distracting little director quirks either ceased altogether, or just stopped bothering me. Certainly for someone like me, a huge fan of his work, it's impossible to watch Williams play such a sad, morose character and not be reminded of what happened shortly after this film was finished. It's just unavoidable. But thankfully, that would just be me reading too much into the story. The man was an actor, and an excellent one at that. Remove all of the comedies from his resume, and you're still left with one of the most impressive collections of dramatic performances in recent memory. This film is no exception. Every time he smiles to avoid confronting the pain and confusion that Nolan feels so strongly, we don't question him in the slightest bit. When we see him look at Leo with his expression of sorrow and pity, it's impossible not to feel right there with him. It may not be best film of Williams' career, and it's a real shame that he never experienced the ultra renaissance that I'm sure was on the horizon for him, but as a film for an actor of this stature to go out on, he could have done much worse than "Boulevard". Grade: B
Did you know
- TriviaLast dramatic movie of Robin Williams.
- GoofsNolan's monitor on his office desk has no video cable attached.
- Quotes
Nolan Mack: People leave, you know? But for some people, it just doesn't seem fair.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Half in the Bag: 2015 Re-Cap (So Far) (2015)
- SoundtracksDo With The Rain
Written by David Wittman
Performed by The Bay Cities Trio
Courtesy Walrus Monster Publishing
- How long is Boulevard?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $126,150
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $7,000
- Jul 12, 2015
- Gross worldwide
- $321,787
- Runtime
- 1h 28m(88 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content