Four Eyed Monsters
Advertisement

Shotgun Stories
  • 0
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • Rate this movie.

Buy it now on DVD
Starting at $18.82
trailerWatch trailer

Rent it, watch it, find it

Advertisement

Directed by Jeff Nichols.
Two families linked by the same father explode into a violent rivalry in this independent Southern gothic drama, the first feature from director Jeff Nichols. Cleaman Hayes lived and died in Little Rock, Arkansas, where he had seven sons by two different women. After wedding Nicole (Natalie Canerday), Cleaman sired three sons, and his lack of concern for their future was reflected in the fact he barely gave them names -- they were dubbed Son (Michael Shannon), Kid (Barlow Jacobs) and Boy (Douglas Ligon). One day, Cleaman abandoned his wife and sons, and left them to survive in deep poverty that has trapped them to this day. Eventually Cleaman cleaned up his act, launched a successful business, married again, and raised four more sons -- Cleaman Jr. (Michael Abbott, Jr.), Mark (Travis Smith), Stephen (Lynsee Provence) and John (David Rhodes), all of whom were given the love and attention Cleaman denied his first three children. When Cleaman dies, all seven sons attend the funeral, and Son, overcome by bitterness, spits on his father's coffin and tells everyone how much he hated the man. Short tempered Mark answers Son with his fists, and a free-for-all breaks out between the two Hayes families. The anger and rivalry doesn't end at the end of the day, and soon a war has broken out between the clans, with no small amount of blood shed on either side. Shotgun Stories received its North American premiere at the 2007 Tribeca Film Festival. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
[more]

Reviews and discussions

Write a review

KarinaKarina SHOTGUN STORIES Hits NY Today
by Karina in Karina on SpoutBlog
hasn't rated it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"Shotgun Stories, the impressively accomplished feature debut of writer/director Jeff Nichols, has a few obvious affinities with the directorial work of its producer, David Gordon Green. Beyond the fact that both filmmakers have a demonstrated interest in the personal tragedies of working class families in the small-town South, much of the commonality lies in the aesthetic sense that Green has been fairly accused of adopting from Terrence Malick. But if Shotgun’s courting of visual pleasure via deliberate pacing and a certain transluscent golden glow fail to reinvent the wheel, at least credit Nichols with picking the seconds that suit the material. A lyrical story of feuding familial factions in Southern Arkansas, Shotgun gets off to a slow, quirk-leavened start, but as a seemingly minor character morphs from grating comic relief to major catalyst for action, the film gains weight and eventually snowballs into an undeniably affecting moral tragedy. (more…) Originally posted on:Spo ... " [More]
SpoutBlogSpoutBlog SHOTGUN STORIES Hits NY Today
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"Shotgun Stories, the impressively accomplished feature debut of writer/director Jeff Nichols, has a few obvious affinities with the directorial work of its producer, David Gordon Green. Beyond the fact that both filmmakers have a demonstrated interest in the personal tragedies of working class families in the small-town South, much of the commonality lies in the aesthetic sense that Green has been fairly accused of adopting from Terrence Malick. But if Shotgun’s courting of visual pleasure via deliberate pacing and a certain transluscent golden glow fail to reinvent the wheel, at least credit Nichols with picking the seconds that suit the material. A lyrical story of feuding familial factions in Southern Arkansas, Shotgun gets off to a slow, quirk-leavened start, but as a seemingly minor character morphs from grating comic relief to major catalyst for action, the film gains weight and eventually snowballs into an undeniably affecting moral tragedy. (more…) Originally posted on:Spo ... " [More]
TheReelerTheReeler Shotgun Blast of Talent
by TheReeler in The Reeler on Spout
hasn't rated it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"Tribeca's trenchant trio: The men of Shotgun Stories By Vadim Rizov Shotgun Stories is a genuinely exciting debut from an unknown quantity -- a rarity at Tribeca, even if the film itself is too weird and unbalanced to be an unqualified success. Jeff Nichols' debut plays like hicksploitation run through a David Gordon Green filter -- not terribly surprising, since the man himself is one of the producers. The mixture is as unstable as it sounds: The pitch-perfect framing and performances are all in service of a tone that's impossible to pin down. Is Shotgun Stories a mocking vision of the Deep South with actors straining to keep straight faces? Probably not -- the film's too steeped in its location shooting to be a giant put-on, and Nichols is an Arkansas native -- but this is a story about taciturn men whose most-used word is "Shee-it" and who don't seem to think any time is a bad time to crack open a Miller High Life. Son (Michael Shannon), Boy (first-timer Douglas Ligon) and Ki ... " [More]
 



Community ratings

mavens
Spout mavens
haven't rated it
most people
Most people
loved it.

Other opinions

nothardly
nothardly
loved it.
Chuchaqui
Chuchaqui
loved it.