Ambientada en la exuberante región vinícola de Australia y España, un joven explora la naturaleza de las relaciones padre-hijo y el camino hacia la comprensión y el perdón.Ambientada en la exuberante región vinícola de Australia y España, un joven explora la naturaleza de las relaciones padre-hijo y el camino hacia la comprensión y el perdón.Ambientada en la exuberante región vinícola de Australia y España, un joven explora la naturaleza de las relaciones padre-hijo y el camino hacia la comprensión y el perdón.
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(No Spoilers) I'm deciding to make a quick review for this movie since I noticed almost nobody reviewed it, and I'm the first non positive review. To be clear this is a fine movie, it's just what you'd expect from this type of movie. In fact I'd say it is slightly above average, but only slightly.
The technical elements are decent. It's pretty well shot, but there are some distracting shots as well. There's some scenes in a desert area where they show the night sky, and some shots look very nice, but for others it was distracting because of the way it was edited. I'm not sure if it was the color grading, or if they used some other VFX's but it just looked off, and it took me out of many scenes. I saw it with my family and my father who almost never notices VFX noticed this in particular and pointed it out.
The acting is pretty solid. The main child actor is definitely better than most child actors and handles the movie well. He's able to play off with the other adult actors as if they were a real family. None of the actors are that great, but they're all quite good with their characters, and feel authentic. There's some good stuff handled with maturity here, but there's also some silly or melodramatic character moments you'd come to expect from these movies. For the most part though this movie does it a lot less than most I've seen, it wasn't annoying or anything.
Edward James Olmos is also in this movie. He's easily the best actor, but they don't do too much with him. In fact he's laying down for most of the movie. He's most used for these cheesy moments, like him narrating some quotes you'd see on a Facebook mother's page every few minutes in the movie. It's completely unnecessary, but at least his voice is nice. The movie has a fine message, it's just been said to death in these coming of age stories. Perhaps I just don't like the genre unless it's doing something inventive or subversive.
I appreciate the short length. Many of these types of movies try to be way longer than they should and it just looses me. Especially with these simple plots that are predictable and have to be carried by their execution. I can't say I was particularly engaged with this, but it mostly kept my attention, and I'd say I enjoyed it enough for me not to dislike it. That being said for this particular movie I did think it could've maybe used a bit more time for certain things. Some side characters are very thin. There's a few moments where something big happens, or something interesting could happen, and then it just cuts away or to the future and it's resolved. There's also a few scenes where I felt some character relationships and motives could've been better fleshed out because there's some drama I was questioning why it was exactly happening.
I would not usually criticize a movie for its rating, but this movie truly had no reason to be going for an R-Rating. The swearing was unnecessary, and quite vulgar for the children too. Not that kids don't swear, it's actually somewhat realistic to some kids nowadays, but making a coming of age story about a boy and his father and alienating the audience who will identify with the boy is kinda dumb. It especially feels forced when there's a pointless sex scene with nudity in the middle of it. If perhaps the swearing and nudity was necessary for some actual plot or character purpose, then fine, but to me it just felt forced on and pointless.
One of this movies selling points is how it took 5 years to film because they waited for the main actor to age up to film scenes in the future. Honestly this was just a gimmick and pointless. The scenes are so minimal they could've used any other actor and it wouldn't have really been a big deal. I doubt many people would've even cared or noticed. It's completely unecessaey especially when none of the other cast comes back. In fact those scenes aren't even that important to the overall movie and it could've been written out. This isn't a criticism, I just wanted to point that out.
These may seem like nitpicks, but there just isn't that much to talk about with this movie, and I want to justify being the only non positive review so far. Overall there is nothing that I found to be bad about this movie, but there's nothing that's that good either. If you're a fan of these coming of age stories you'll probably enjoy this, but don't watch it with your kids. Is it better than the average one? Yes, but only by a little. At the very least it's very short so it doesn't overstay it's welcome. Most people will probably like it but it's not a movie that will stick you with you unless it particularly relates to you. I'd wait for it to be on a streaming site if it interests you instead of buying it.
(5.5/10)
The technical elements are decent. It's pretty well shot, but there are some distracting shots as well. There's some scenes in a desert area where they show the night sky, and some shots look very nice, but for others it was distracting because of the way it was edited. I'm not sure if it was the color grading, or if they used some other VFX's but it just looked off, and it took me out of many scenes. I saw it with my family and my father who almost never notices VFX noticed this in particular and pointed it out.
The acting is pretty solid. The main child actor is definitely better than most child actors and handles the movie well. He's able to play off with the other adult actors as if they were a real family. None of the actors are that great, but they're all quite good with their characters, and feel authentic. There's some good stuff handled with maturity here, but there's also some silly or melodramatic character moments you'd come to expect from these movies. For the most part though this movie does it a lot less than most I've seen, it wasn't annoying or anything.
Edward James Olmos is also in this movie. He's easily the best actor, but they don't do too much with him. In fact he's laying down for most of the movie. He's most used for these cheesy moments, like him narrating some quotes you'd see on a Facebook mother's page every few minutes in the movie. It's completely unnecessary, but at least his voice is nice. The movie has a fine message, it's just been said to death in these coming of age stories. Perhaps I just don't like the genre unless it's doing something inventive or subversive.
I appreciate the short length. Many of these types of movies try to be way longer than they should and it just looses me. Especially with these simple plots that are predictable and have to be carried by their execution. I can't say I was particularly engaged with this, but it mostly kept my attention, and I'd say I enjoyed it enough for me not to dislike it. That being said for this particular movie I did think it could've maybe used a bit more time for certain things. Some side characters are very thin. There's a few moments where something big happens, or something interesting could happen, and then it just cuts away or to the future and it's resolved. There's also a few scenes where I felt some character relationships and motives could've been better fleshed out because there's some drama I was questioning why it was exactly happening.
I would not usually criticize a movie for its rating, but this movie truly had no reason to be going for an R-Rating. The swearing was unnecessary, and quite vulgar for the children too. Not that kids don't swear, it's actually somewhat realistic to some kids nowadays, but making a coming of age story about a boy and his father and alienating the audience who will identify with the boy is kinda dumb. It especially feels forced when there's a pointless sex scene with nudity in the middle of it. If perhaps the swearing and nudity was necessary for some actual plot or character purpose, then fine, but to me it just felt forced on and pointless.
One of this movies selling points is how it took 5 years to film because they waited for the main actor to age up to film scenes in the future. Honestly this was just a gimmick and pointless. The scenes are so minimal they could've used any other actor and it wouldn't have really been a big deal. I doubt many people would've even cared or noticed. It's completely unecessaey especially when none of the other cast comes back. In fact those scenes aren't even that important to the overall movie and it could've been written out. This isn't a criticism, I just wanted to point that out.
These may seem like nitpicks, but there just isn't that much to talk about with this movie, and I want to justify being the only non positive review so far. Overall there is nothing that I found to be bad about this movie, but there's nothing that's that good either. If you're a fan of these coming of age stories you'll probably enjoy this, but don't watch it with your kids. Is it better than the average one? Yes, but only by a little. At the very least it's very short so it doesn't overstay it's welcome. Most people will probably like it but it's not a movie that will stick you with you unless it particularly relates to you. I'd wait for it to be on a streaming site if it interests you instead of buying it.
(5.5/10)
- EddyTheMartian007
- 13 jun 2021
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- Duración1 hora 26 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.35 : 1
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By what name was Chasing Wonders (2020) officially released in Canada in English?
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