IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,7/10
3247
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Während eines Wochenendausflugs in den Catskills gerät die 17-jährige Sam zwischen die Fronten zwischen ihrem Vater und seinem ältesten Freund.Während eines Wochenendausflugs in den Catskills gerät die 17-jährige Sam zwischen die Fronten zwischen ihrem Vater und seinem ältesten Freund.Während eines Wochenendausflugs in den Catskills gerät die 17-jährige Sam zwischen die Fronten zwischen ihrem Vater und seinem ältesten Freund.
- Auszeichnungen
- 6 Gewinne & 22 Nominierungen insgesamt
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India Donaldson makes a smooth, clever, and captivating indie film debut that I thoroughly enjoyed. In just 90 minutes, she weaves a story about three characters that seems straightforward at first glance, but it's so sharp and engaging that you might not catch the deeper layers unfolding beneath the surface.
Sam (Lily Collias) is a sensible seventeen-year-old gearing up for a camping trip with her dad, his best friend, and his friend's son, who's around her age. When a last-minute argument causes the son to bail, Sam ends up alone with the two older guys on their wilderness adventure in upstate New York. As a grounded young woman on the brink of adulthood, she takes the good-natured teasing from the men in stride, but as the trip goes on, the dynamics shift, revealing more about who these men really are.
Though the two men don't often check in on Sam's feelings, they seem decent enough. Chris has always supported his daughter's queer identity, and she keeps in touch with her girlfriend whenever she can get a signal. Matt tells Sam she's wise beyond her years, calling her a rare "good one" compared to other reckless teens.
Scene by scene, Donaldson skillfully reveals the underlying dynamics, aided by the remarkable performance of Collias. For such a young actress, she brings incredible depth to Sam. As the relationships evolve, her introspection shines through, often conveyed more through her gestures and body language than through dialogue, showcasing a level of confidence and skill that's impressive for her age.
A quiet yet powerful film!
Sam (Lily Collias) is a sensible seventeen-year-old gearing up for a camping trip with her dad, his best friend, and his friend's son, who's around her age. When a last-minute argument causes the son to bail, Sam ends up alone with the two older guys on their wilderness adventure in upstate New York. As a grounded young woman on the brink of adulthood, she takes the good-natured teasing from the men in stride, but as the trip goes on, the dynamics shift, revealing more about who these men really are.
Though the two men don't often check in on Sam's feelings, they seem decent enough. Chris has always supported his daughter's queer identity, and she keeps in touch with her girlfriend whenever she can get a signal. Matt tells Sam she's wise beyond her years, calling her a rare "good one" compared to other reckless teens.
Scene by scene, Donaldson skillfully reveals the underlying dynamics, aided by the remarkable performance of Collias. For such a young actress, she brings incredible depth to Sam. As the relationships evolve, her introspection shines through, often conveyed more through her gestures and body language than through dialogue, showcasing a level of confidence and skill that's impressive for her age.
A quiet yet powerful film!
Before writing this, I checked my calendar and half-planned a trip to a nearby bird sanctuary on the upcoming weekend. That is the effect Good One had on me, although the makers had different plans with the way the film moves from being about a trio nature-hiking to one about relationship dynamics. The shift is sudden and it's only then you realise that the writer had subtly hinted it before. You'd be lying if you say you were seeing it coming. All the cosiness the film had created till then goes away but you still stare into the nature and wonder about things. Good One has a good effect on you and I recommend it. Lead actor is terrific and so are the other two actors. Together, they have renewed my hiking plans.
The anticipated twist never materialized. The film attempts to blend the tranquility of nature with a forced tension, relying on the setup of a group of men and a young woman isolated in the woods. This approach feels contrived and detracts from what could have been a great movie about a father and daughter learning to adjust with adulthood.
The film presents a viewpoint suggesting that men may have unfavorable traits, while also proposing that women are remarkable with a level of intelligence that may be considered exceptional. We only are introduced to 2 women and about 10 men throughout the film. All 10 coming across as arrogant and capable of anything and the two women as being introverted and rational. This alone sets a stage for the message men=bad and women=good. In my view, the last 20 minutes of the film unequivocally prove the opposite.
The acting was superb across the board, and the mixing, editing, and overall production were done well.
The film presents a viewpoint suggesting that men may have unfavorable traits, while also proposing that women are remarkable with a level of intelligence that may be considered exceptional. We only are introduced to 2 women and about 10 men throughout the film. All 10 coming across as arrogant and capable of anything and the two women as being introverted and rational. This alone sets a stage for the message men=bad and women=good. In my view, the last 20 minutes of the film unequivocally prove the opposite.
The acting was superb across the board, and the mixing, editing, and overall production were done well.
This is a movie worth seeing without being unforgettable. The lead actress portraits her role excellently and the story has a nice reflective pace. There are some attempts to give depth to the other two characters, the dad and his friend, however despite their efforts to sound deep and complex, their interactions end up being lame and basic, due to their limited mindsets and stereotypical 'manly' existential struggles that do not show a glimpse of real self-awareness.
To all the reviews disliking the movie because it's 'too feminist' or negatively biased towards men, as a woman I would like to express that if you were one, you'd be very familiar with these dynamics since an even much earlier age than 17yo, no matter where/how you grew up. You'd be shocked to learn how often these weird interactions happen to all girls and women in the most random contexts, and from people you would never expect. I'm not saying all men are like this thankfully, but it's still too many. I hope this movie stimulates a real reflection on the normalisation of these dynamics in women's experiences.
To all the reviews disliking the movie because it's 'too feminist' or negatively biased towards men, as a woman I would like to express that if you were one, you'd be very familiar with these dynamics since an even much earlier age than 17yo, no matter where/how you grew up. You'd be shocked to learn how often these weird interactions happen to all girls and women in the most random contexts, and from people you would never expect. I'm not saying all men are like this thankfully, but it's still too many. I hope this movie stimulates a real reflection on the normalisation of these dynamics in women's experiences.
I think maybe son "Dylan" (a fleeting appearance from Julian Grady) might have had the right idea when he decides to opt out of his dad's camping trip with his best friend and his daughter. Seems that "Matt" (Danny McCarthy) is having father-son issues amidst a divorce after he strayed with someone quite a bit younger. His travelling companions are lifelong buddy (James Le Gros) and teenage "Sammy" (Lily Collias) who have a more typical relationship. She has known "Matt" for years and for a while their trip, trekking through the beautiful Catskill mountains, seems to pass off amiably enough. They even meet some fellow travellers for some who has been where grandstanding; the tents seems to go up without any slapstick and there's a little teasing about the nature of her relationship with "Jessie". "Matt" however, begins to feel a bit melancholy though as he gradually beings to appreciate that his family is disintegrating and after a revealing conversation with "Sammy" and an even more revealing and wholly inadequate one she has with her father afterwards, it becomes pretty clear that she is not without her own problems and her father has quite a bit of growing up of his own to do. It's a very slowly paced drama this, with most of the dialogue delivered as naturally occurring conversation. That works to an extent as sentences are left unfinished and inferences are made using facial expressions, but what is missing here is any sense of development of these people. We are left to make too many assumptions which rather lets the thing down as the story heads to it's crunch moment. That rather comes out of the blue and seems contrived to make the very point the auteur wants to make despite it not really fitting the profile or behaviour of the characters we had hitherto been walking through the wilderness with. I suppose, without giving the game away, I just don't agree with the fundamental message that the latter stages of the film seem to be trying to convey here and so was ultimately a bit disappointed that what started off as an light-hearted, quite wittily scripted, observation of family became something a little subliminally sinister for the sake of it. It's a gorgeous film to watch and Collias delivers engagingly, too, but films like this risk fuelling a growing misconception of an opportunistic or even predatory male stereotype that most men simply won't accept and isn't actually true.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesIndia Donaldson's feature film directorial debut.
- SoundtracksTouching Souls
Written by Kay Gardner
Performed by Kay Gardner
Courtesy of Sea Gnomes Music
By Arrangement with Hildegard Publishing Company
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Details
Box Office
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 352.135 $
- Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
- 27.846 $
- 11. Aug. 2024
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 373.238 $
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 29 Minuten
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 2.00 : 1
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