Beans
- 2020
- 1h 32min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
7,0/10
1,2 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Basado en hechos reales, el primer largometraje de Tracey Deer que narra el enfrentamiento de 78 días entre dos comunidades Mohawk y las fuerzas gubernamentales en 1990 en Quebec.Basado en hechos reales, el primer largometraje de Tracey Deer que narra el enfrentamiento de 78 días entre dos comunidades Mohawk y las fuerzas gubernamentales en 1990 en Quebec.Basado en hechos reales, el primer largometraje de Tracey Deer que narra el enfrentamiento de 78 días entre dos comunidades Mohawk y las fuerzas gubernamentales en 1990 en Quebec.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
- Premios
- 16 premios y 21 nominaciones en total
D'Pharaoh Woon-A-Tai
- Hank
- (as D'Pharaoh Mckay Woon-a-Tai)
Caroline Gelinas
- Victoria
- (as Caroline Gélinas)
Adam LeBlanc
- Police Officer #1
- (as Adam Leblanc)
Frank Marrs
- Police Officer #2
- (as Francis Lamarre)
Jérémie Earp
- Police Officer #4
- (as Jérémie Earp-Lavigne)
Reseñas destacadas
In both the storytelling and performances "Beans" is packed full of tenderness and heart wrenching moments. It captures the Mohawk experience of this conflict through the eyes of a young girl who is simultaneously trying to navigate young adulthood. Beautifully done and highly recommended.
As an American aware of our troubled past with Native American history and the founding of our nation, I was not as familiar with Canada's own racist background.
Surrounding the real life standoff between the government and the native population of Quebec around the construction of a golf course on Indian burial ground is the backdrop of a parellel story of a young girl growing up in the midst of chaos.
Kiawentiio is the actress in the lead role and she is magnificent in the part. Her hard driving mother only wants the best for her, including her attendance at a mostly white school.
She meets a neighbor who attempts to toughen her up and they form an unlikely friendship.
I recommend this film as a good educational tool and for the lead performance.
Surrounding the real life standoff between the government and the native population of Quebec around the construction of a golf course on Indian burial ground is the backdrop of a parellel story of a young girl growing up in the midst of chaos.
Kiawentiio is the actress in the lead role and she is magnificent in the part. Her hard driving mother only wants the best for her, including her attendance at a mostly white school.
She meets a neighbor who attempts to toughen her up and they form an unlikely friendship.
I recommend this film as a good educational tool and for the lead performance.
Seriously, this movie blew me away. Kiawentiio may be very young, but her talent feels beyond her years. Also some other familiar faces Paulina Alexis and D'Pharaoh Woon-A-Tai from Reservation Dogs. Literally lightning in a bottle casting for this debut film by Tracey Deer. So much that I cant imagine her ever topping this and yet she most definitely will. I was fortunate enough to see it virtually during its festival circuit, but now that it's available for purchase, I've bought it and rewatched already. This is just the kind of movie that reminds you why you love movies! And being someone who has forgotten for a while, it's a breath of fresh air to remember.
I stopped watching about 2/3 through. The mom, in an overwrought scene, had shortly before driven through the gauntlet of stone-throwing, white yahoos while the police (SQ?) merely watched. But what made me throw in the towel was the way the filmmaker chose to develop the "friendship" between Beans and her rougher peers. That didn't work for me at all. I'm assuming those youthful relationships and the incipient awakening of the heroine from a protected innocence was meant as a metaphor for First Nations society, but I don't know.
The lack of nuance in the storytelling and a lack of historical footage that captured the racism encountered in the course of daily life off-reserve, during the blockade prevented me from feeling what I had hoped for.
The lack of nuance in the storytelling and a lack of historical footage that captured the racism encountered in the course of daily life off-reserve, during the blockade prevented me from feeling what I had hoped for.
Set against the backdrop of the Oka crisis, Beans is a respectful Mohawk teenager applying to go to an exclusive private school. She tries to find her way with new friends as the external situation heats up around her.
It's a compelling coming of age story and a compelling true history story. It's the marrying of the two that the film does struggle from time to time. It feels like the movie is trying to hit all the points of the crisis. Each incident is specifically linked to the real world footage. I don't know if this is based on a real person. I do sense a writer connecting the dots of the story. Beans is a compelling character and she has quite a personal journey. This is a compelling film.
It's a compelling coming of age story and a compelling true history story. It's the marrying of the two that the film does struggle from time to time. It feels like the movie is trying to hit all the points of the crisis. Each incident is specifically linked to the real world footage. I don't know if this is based on a real person. I do sense a writer connecting the dots of the story. Beans is a compelling character and she has quite a personal journey. This is a compelling film.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesFeeling the movie had limited commercial value, its Canadian distributor, Mongrel Media, decided to give it a limited release and marketing campaign, resulting in the movie becoming a box office flop.
- ConexionesReferences Tiburón (1975)
- Banda sonoraLight at the End
Composed and performed by Kiawentiio
Arranged and mixed by Mario Sévigny
Courtesy of Kiawentiio
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- How long is Beans?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Duración
- 1h 32min(92 min)
- Color
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