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Mean Creek
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Directed by Jacob Aaron Estes.
Independent filmmaker Jacob Aaron Estes makes his feature debut with the coming-of-age drama Mean Creek. Rory Culkin, Ryan Kelley, Scott Mechlowicz, Josh Peck, Trevor Morgan, and Carly Schroeder are teenagers living in small-town Oregon. Some of the boys take a boat trip for a birthday celebration. When they get an idea to play a mean trick on the town bully, it suddenly goes too far. Soon they're forced to deal with the unexpected consequences of their actions. Mean Creek was workshopped at the Eugene O'Neill Center's National Playwrights Conference and premiered at the Sundance Film Festival as part of the American Spectrum program. ~ Andrea LeVasseur, All Movie Guide
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SpoutBlogSpoutBlog Plot vs. Prestige - ‘Paranoid P ...
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
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"What if this movie were not directed by acclaimed filmmaker Gus Van Sant? What if it had not been honored with a special prize at last year’s Cannes Film Festival? What if it had not been an official selection of the Toronto and New York Film Festivals? What if it wasn’t nominated for three (Independent) Spirit Awards, including Best Picture, Best Director and Best Producer? What if Manohla Dargis didn’t consider it, “one of the most moving and delicately felt films of Gus Van Sant’s career”? Would Paranoid Park still seem that appealing? Not to me, but then I’ve seen enough films involving teens covering up an intentional or accidental murder. And that’s despite having enjoyed most of them, including Mean Creek, Bully, George Washington and even (though much, much less so) I Know What You Did Last Summer. Honestly, if this new domestic trailer for Paranoid Park didn’t mention all its prestigious claims, I probably wouldn’t be that compelled to see it. In fact, even if it simply me ... " [More]
JakeStevensJakeStevens Kudos To Paramount's Preview De ...
by JakeStevens in JakeStevens Blog
loved it.
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"An fantastic little independent film that fell way under the radar (I only knew about this film because of the MILLION and a half previews Paramount love to put on their DVDs), more films should aspire to take the risks this one does, even if it doesn't exactly hit a bull's eye. One part character study, one part morality play, I particularly liked the stark cinematography as it gave the whole film a sort of rainy-day quality. The biggest and brightest star of this film, though, is it's wonderful cello score which adds to the melancholy tone of the film. The closing credits song, "Angel On My Shoulder" is of particular note, and a fitting elegiac of youth's innocence lost. " [More]
RyantheFATERyantheFATE Mean Creek
by RyantheFATE in RyantheFATE Blog
loved it.
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"I really don't understand who the 'experts' only have it 3/5. This is movie is by far one of the best movies I've seen. It has probably the most emotional scene I've seen in any movie as well. Mean Creek tells the story of a group of kids simply wanting to get revenge on a school bully. To go along with this great, and suspensful at times, story, Mean Creek contains one of the best soundtracks I've heard in a long while. If you can, pick it up. You won't be dissapointed. " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
Of all the films that deal with the slippery morality of youth -- Kids and Thirteen come to mind -- Mean Creek is one of the few that does more in the name of complicated truth than simplistic shock value. Writer/director Jacob Aaron Estes really has something to say here, and thank goodness, it's not that teens left unsupervised become sociopaths. The bully at the center of Estes' captivating debut is alternately annoying and congenial, just like any precocious mid-teen -- and not unlike the teens who plot to teach him a lesson. Estes has a remarkably assured sense of the balance between kids' antisocial public persona and their underlying decency, and how peer posturing can cause that joking aggression to morph into something real and ugly. Estes also has an ear for their dialogue, and his occasional use of digital video (the bully is never without his DV camera) lends the film a palpable sense of realism. A good script and some astute symbolism wouldn't fly without strong performances, and Mean Creek has these as well. In direct contrast to his straight-laced work in Eurotrip, Scott Mechlowicz simmers as the rebellious instigator, and Rory Culkin shows the chops displayed by his older brother Kieran (but, alas, not his older brother Macaulay). As the lone girl on the boating trip, the impossibly innocent-looking Carly Schroeder has her own strong moments of moral weakness. They all contribute to giving the potentially clunky, overly literal title a secondary meaning: these kids may be mean, as in cruel, but they're also mean, as in...average. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide
 



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