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99 Homes

  • 2014
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 52m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
40K
YOUR RATING
Michael Shannon and Andrew Garfield in 99 Homes (2014)
Charismatic and ruthless businessman Rick Carver is making a killing by repossessing homes - gaming the real estate market, Wall Street banks and the US government. When he evicts Dennis Nash, a single father trying to care for his mother and young son, Nash becomes so desperate to provide for his family that he goes to work for Carver - the very man who evicted him in the first place. Carver promises Nash a way to regain his home and earn security for his family, but slyly seduces him into a lifestyle of wealth and glamour. It is a deal-with-the-devil that comes with an increasingly high cost - on Carver's orders, Nash must evict families from their homes. As Nash falls deeper into Carver's web, he finds his situation grows more brutal and dangerous than he ever imagined.
Play trailer2:26
31 Videos
99+ Photos
Legal DramaCrimeDramaFinancial Drama

A recently unemployed single father struggles to get back his foreclosed home by working for the real estate broker who is the source of his frustration.A recently unemployed single father struggles to get back his foreclosed home by working for the real estate broker who is the source of his frustration.A recently unemployed single father struggles to get back his foreclosed home by working for the real estate broker who is the source of his frustration.

  • Director
    • Ramin Bahrani
  • Writers
    • Ramin Bahrani
    • Bahareh Azimi
    • Amir Naderi
  • Stars
    • Andrew Garfield
    • Michael Shannon
    • Laura Dern
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    40K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ramin Bahrani
    • Writers
      • Ramin Bahrani
      • Bahareh Azimi
      • Amir Naderi
    • Stars
      • Andrew Garfield
      • Michael Shannon
      • Laura Dern
    • 146User reviews
    • 200Critic reviews
    • 76Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 12 wins & 24 nominations total

    Videos31

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:26
    Official Trailer
    Online Trailer
    Trailer 1:07
    Online Trailer
    Online Trailer
    Trailer 1:07
    Online Trailer
    Clip
    Clip 1:24
    Clip
    Clip
    Clip 0:49
    Clip
    Clip
    Clip 0:58
    Clip
    Clip
    Clip 0:53
    Clip

    Photos105

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    Top cast72

    Edit
    Andrew Garfield
    Andrew Garfield
    • Dennis Nash
    Michael Shannon
    Michael Shannon
    • Rick Carver
    Laura Dern
    Laura Dern
    • Lynn Nash
    Clancy Brown
    Clancy Brown
    • Mr. William Freeman
    Douglas M. Griffin
    Douglas M. Griffin
    • Officer Dudura
    • (as Doug Griffin)
    Randy Austin
    Randy Austin
    • Sheriff Anderon
    Carl Palmer
    Carl Palmer
    • Sheriff Carl
    James Brown
    • Elliot
    Luke Sexton
    Luke Sexton
    • Crew Leader
    Noah Lomax
    Noah Lomax
    • Connor Nash
    Alex Aristidis
    • Alex Greene
    • (as Alex Aristidis Perdikis)
    Tim Guinee
    Tim Guinee
    • Frank Greene
    Jonathan Tabler
    Jonathan Tabler
    • Lawyer Bailey
    Garrett Kruithof
    Garrett Kruithof
    • Court Clerk
    Richard Holden
    • Judge
    Deneen Tyler
    Deneen Tyler
    • Bailiff
    Albert C. Bates
    • Derek
    • (as Albert Bates)
    Jayson Warner Smith
    Jayson Warner Smith
    • Jeff
    • (as Jayson Smith)
    • Director
      • Ramin Bahrani
    • Writers
      • Ramin Bahrani
      • Bahareh Azimi
      • Amir Naderi
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews146

    7.140.2K
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    Featured reviews

    Gordon-11

    A thought provoking film

    This film tells the story of a hard working builder who gets unemployed, and hence cannot keep up with the mortgage payments and is subsequently evicted. Stars align themselves and his fortune is reversed when he is offered a job by the man who evicted him from his home.

    "99 Homes" has an intense beginning that absorbs me into the story. The circumstances it portrays is very real and relevant to people in lower income brackets, and their pain of losing their homes is piercingly recreated. I feel so sorry for Dennis because he appears to be such a hard-working, honest and amicable guy. As the story progresses, he is faced with various moral dilemmas. The story is captivating, and it's helped by the intensity of the marvellous performances of Michael Shannon and Andrew Garfield. It is a very good and thought provoking film, that leaves me wondering about the rights and wrongs of Rick and Dennis.
    10lucasnochez

    TIFF Review: 99 Homes/www.nightfilmreviews.com

    "America doesn't bail out losers. America bails out winners." How is that for an American dream motto? This axiom, among many others presented in the film, is the foundation as the blood- splattered frames of Ramin Bahrani's latest offering begin to roll.

    The blood is from a homeowner who'd rather kill himself than be kicked out of his home by Realtor Rick Carver (Michael Shannon). More of a preying vulture than empathetic human being, Carver shows no sympathy for the man who took his life instead of giving up his family home – an attitude trait we believe he has for everyone.

    Bahrani, a prolific American independent director, is known for focusing on strong characters. Highly secretive and mostly broken individuals, the challenges and obstacles many of his protagonists face are mapped out and executed in unique, but usually tragic ways. His expertise is focusing more on the formula of their progression than the final outcome. With 99 Homes, Bahrani switches gears, focusing more on the narrative and development of the story, rather than his deep, often slow, evolution of memorable characters.

    Thankfully, Bahrani doesn't exactly abandon ship in his character building philosophy with his main protagonist and antagonist in the film. He is able to put more focus on his narrative and visual style here, thanks to actor Shannon, who helps maintain the flow of Carver as well as the people around him. For the most part, character-driven directors find it difficult to give all creative energy to their actors, especially after building up a filmography that shows his obsession with leading his main men. But with an actor like Shannon, one of the most confident and reliable actors working today, Bahrani needs not have this fear of relinquishing control of character development. In fact, Shannon's understanding of Carver's journey and discreet choices of dialogue, begs the question if Bahrani could have achieved this character development on his own.

    Bahrani's protagonist is Dennis Nash, played wonderfully by Andrew Garfield. Garfield, who was one of the few fortunate Hollywood actors to grace the stage with the legendary Philip Seymour Hoffman on the Broadway stint of Death of a Salesman, seems to have absorbed much of the acting genius of the late Hoffman. Holding his own against a larger than life acting force that is Shannon, Garfield's Nash allows himself to feed off Carver's greed and sinisterly convincing monologues with scenes of heart-wrench, grit and sensitivity.

    99 Homes shouldn't be described as the typical tour-de-force, but more of a tour-de-fact cinematic achievement. The filmmaker, whose adamant cinematic attitude is almost non- apologetic on-screen, choosing to highlight a truly sad time in American history. Set in Florida in 2010, when homes were being repossessed by the bank for every chime of the clock on the wall, the film shows a raw portrait of every family's worst nightmare; a moment of complete vulnerability and uncertainty–being left on the side of the road, with all you're worldly possessions sitting on the lawn.

    As troubling as it sounds, some of the best scenes of the film are when people are evicted from their homes. Beginning with Nash, his mother Lynn Nash (Laura Dern) and son Connor (Noah Lomax), and ranging from young, old, non-English speaking, accepting and manic, the film shows the different shades of people, sometimes dangerous and always desperate.

    Nash, a general contractor who never sits at the wayside, becomes a true character of action. The determination of Dennis Nash, thanks to the convincing acting of Garfield, is a little glimmer of hope that man is able to triumph over the recklessness of society's actions, but at a severe cost. Nash's choices and inner struggle is a sharp and dangerous double-edged sword. Nash is a truly tormented moral character who, through his journey of self-discovery, wealth and pain, always draws on the most basic human elements. The biggest question Bahrani leaves audiences with is, "what would you do if you were left in the same situation?"

    Possibly the most commercial of his work thus far, the director of Chop Shop, Man Push Cart, At Any Cost and my personal favourite Goodbye Solo, does a magnificent job of juggling the moral and ethical lines of his characters, allowing the audience to ask itself the same questions the characters are asking themselves as the film progresses. This fine element of 99 Homes keeps Bahrani's tradition of bustlingly tragic and anguished characters alive with vivid, exciting, and mostly unpredictable results.

    99 Homes is one of the most complete and appealing films of Bahrani's career. Engaging enough for causal movie-goers, and enough to chew for veteran nit-picking cinephiles, the film is easily one of the most compelling films at TIFF.

    Garfield may be know for his role as afflicted teen Peter Parker or Spider-Man by many, while audiences may know Shannon best for his villainous turn as General Zod in the recent Superman reboot Man of Steel. The best part about watching 99 Homes is analyzing these men, and seeing them transform before our eyes into the demons that haunt the streets and doorsteps of everyday people. Sheltered in our own little seats and watching the unfortunate tragedy unfold on-screen, this compassionate slice of other people's reality is one of the most engaging features of 2014. Founded on concrete performances, sturdy direction and a narrative with a good roof on its head, 99 Homes is built to last.
    7subxerogravity

    The intense drama was increased by it being about recent events and well acted.

    Micheal Shannon really controls the screen when he's on it. He plays villain well, especially well in this film, showing both sides of the coin.

    99 Homes expresses how everyone was effected by the economy drop and how using the excuse of keeping afloat as a way to let doing what you have to do corrupt you.

    99 homes is about the corruption of Dennis Nash, played by Andrew Garfield as he does what he has to do to get back his home for his mom and his child, after it being taken away from by Rick Carver, played by Micheal Shannon. Ironically Dennis goes to work for the enemy becoming the very person that put him in this situation.

    You can't help to be emotional about 99 Homes, it's a movie about a period in history but it's so recent, you either are or know someone who has a story similar. Attacking such current events add to the drama and the tension of the movie.

    It was interesting to watch this narration unfold and well acted by Micheal Shannon and Andrew Garfield. Very good watch.
    7snsh

    I liked the first half

    The movie starts out well, and the first eviction scene will leave you shaking in your boots imagining your family and belongings getting foreclosed and tossed into the street. I can't think of another film that focuses on the eviction process so intensely.

    You're better skipping the end of the movie (after the scene with the old man). The last forty minutes of the film are not satisfying at all, and just gets dumb with characters acting more and more ridiculously. In the beginning of the movie, many of the characters act over the top for the sake of dramatic tension, but it it gets to be too much towards the end.
    8Leofwine_draca

    Nearly great

    For most of the running time, 99 HOMES is an exemplary thriller. It's always a delight when you find a film detailing a subject matter that's not been covered very much in film before and the financial crash of 2008 is the topic here, in particularly the glut of ill-conceived sub-prime mortgages in America that led to the worldwide recession. The film follows the fortunes of a real estate broker who makes a living from evicting people from their homes.

    It's an electrifying premise and one that's superbly directed by Ramin Bahrani who brings a documentary-style realism to his work. Certainly the camera-work is fantastic, often hand held and getting into the faces of the actors so that you feel close up and involved with the situations. However, the real ace up the sleeve is the casting of Michael Shannon as the criminal broker; he gives a performance of reptilian magnitude as an amoral money-hunter and he's simply magnificent. I loved this guy in BOARDWALK EMPIRE and he continues to go from strength to strength here.

    The eyes and ears of the viewer is played by Andrew Garfield, less impressive in a more subtle part. Garfield isn't bad when he gets the opportunity - he was fine in THE SOCIAL NETWORK - and he's more than believable as the desperate young man in this. Laura Dern and Clancy Brown flesh out the rest of the cast. The film is by turns intense, awkward, moving, and exciting, but always engrossing and not to mention gripping. The only misstep is a rather silly sub-plot in which Garfield tries to hide his work from his family, which feels rather irrelevant (if he's putting food on the table, what does it matter?). The other problem is the trite Hollywood ending; for a film that's exemplified gritty realism throughout, to cop out in this way is a real joke. Other than those problems, it's fine.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Director Ramin Bahrani used a 24mm lens for close-ups of Andrew Garfield as it gave greater depth as to what was showing on his face.
    • Goofs
      Simple admissions of guilt someone in a stressful situation is not going to cause the police to immediately arrest you. Nash was facing an armed man who clearly wasn't bent upon self injury or perhaps harming others. Even if he "admitted" his alleged guilt in a criminal matter, the police would have required more evidence (such as the event had actual occurred) before they could arrest him.
    • Quotes

      Rick Carver: Don't be soft. Do you think America give a flying rats ass about you or me? America doesn't bail out the losers. America was built by bailing out winners. By rigging a nation of the winners, for the winners, by the winners.

    • Connections
      Featured in The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon: Kristen Stewart/Michael Shannon/Cage the Elephant (2016)
    • Soundtracks
      Loco Loco
      Written by Marlon Betancur

      Performed by Mr. Kapri

      Published by Edimusica USA

      Courtesy of Miami Records Inc.

      By arrangement with Ocean Park Music Group

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    FAQ20

    • How long is 99 Homes?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 18, 2016 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • 99 casas
    • Filming locations
      • New Orleans, Louisiana, USA(set as Orlando, Florida)
    • Production companies
      • Broad Green Pictures
      • Hyde Park Entertainment
      • Imagenation Abu Dhabi FZ
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $8,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $1,411,927
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $32,253
      • Sep 27, 2015
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,828,232
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 52 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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    Michael Shannon and Andrew Garfield in 99 Homes (2014)
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