ÉVALUATION IMDb
6,4/10
1,6 k
MA NOTE
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueMusical duo Donnie and Joe Emerson spend everything they have to produce a record in the 1970s.Musical duo Donnie and Joe Emerson spend everything they have to produce a record in the 1970s.Musical duo Donnie and Joe Emerson spend everything they have to produce a record in the 1970s.
- Prix
- 2 nominations au total
Kayla Jade Adeniran
- Party Girl
- (rumored)
Mellanie Hubert
- Mandy
- (as Melanie Hubert)
Doug Dawson
- Dion
- (as Dougie Dawson)
Avis en vedette
10Lazzell
A gem of a story, reminiscent of a short story by Sherwood Anderson, Richard Ford, Eudora Welty, Raymond Carver, Jim Harrison, or the Irish writer Claire Keegan. There's a surface plainness and apparent accessibility, seemingly easily penetrable.
But small issues of moral choice build up, we see mature feelings wrestle with the idealism of youth.
Characters we thought we could easily understand become more complex. This focus on the seriousness of life goes to the heart of the matter: family loyalty, honor, compassion, forgiveness (and self-forgiveness). "Dreaming' Wild" has a fundamental directness that casts a profound, direct light on the austere interior of the Emerson family.
Its precision and pacing is writerly, it gives the viewer time to think.
Remarkable performances by Casey Affleck, Beau Bridges, Walton Goggins, Noah June, and Jack Dylan Grazer. And Chris Messina.
But small issues of moral choice build up, we see mature feelings wrestle with the idealism of youth.
Characters we thought we could easily understand become more complex. This focus on the seriousness of life goes to the heart of the matter: family loyalty, honor, compassion, forgiveness (and self-forgiveness). "Dreaming' Wild" has a fundamental directness that casts a profound, direct light on the austere interior of the Emerson family.
Its precision and pacing is writerly, it gives the viewer time to think.
Remarkable performances by Casey Affleck, Beau Bridges, Walton Goggins, Noah June, and Jack Dylan Grazer. And Chris Messina.
THis is my first review, but not the first movie I've seen :)
I Love Movies about Life. And this is one of that.
You can feel all the emotions in it, in a very authentic way. The passion to music & nature, family life, love, lost.,.,.,
Further its specially about brotherhood, about to accept somebody for who he is.
And this is all bedded in dreamlike locations. Far away from civilization, endless forests, colourful sunets and old trees where this beautiful story starts to grow.
I think I am not driving too far, cause Casey Affleck should get an oscar nomination for best lead role.
Give this a movie a chance, u wont regret!
You can feel all the emotions in it, in a very authentic way. The passion to music & nature, family life, love, lost.,.,.,
Further its specially about brotherhood, about to accept somebody for who he is.
And this is all bedded in dreamlike locations. Far away from civilization, endless forests, colourful sunets and old trees where this beautiful story starts to grow.
I think I am not driving too far, cause Casey Affleck should get an oscar nomination for best lead role.
Give this a movie a chance, u wont regret!
When I saw the trailer, I was intrigued about this story, so I checked out the background of it online and thought this might be a movie worth watching.
The music aspect of the movie is well done. And the actors all play their parts well.
But I felt a lack of connection at the end of the day. It really was a half hour or hour MTV special that was stretched out too long. I really couldn't buy into the angst that Don was feeling, even though I could understand where it was coming from. It just felt repetitive. Especially all of the speeches that happen in the movie. Usually a movie will have one or two big speeches. This one seemed to have many 'oscar' moments that just weighed it down too much.
I also didn't like the cliched 'older self meets younger self'. I think that's been played to death, and is just cheesy now.
I am glad for the Emerson family and I hope they are continuing to rake in the money from the album. It was nice seeing the real voice of Donnie as it is today, he definitely is a gifted singer. But the movie just didn't resonate with me, and that's coming from a music lover.
The music aspect of the movie is well done. And the actors all play their parts well.
But I felt a lack of connection at the end of the day. It really was a half hour or hour MTV special that was stretched out too long. I really couldn't buy into the angst that Don was feeling, even though I could understand where it was coming from. It just felt repetitive. Especially all of the speeches that happen in the movie. Usually a movie will have one or two big speeches. This one seemed to have many 'oscar' moments that just weighed it down too much.
I also didn't like the cliched 'older self meets younger self'. I think that's been played to death, and is just cheesy now.
I am glad for the Emerson family and I hope they are continuing to rake in the money from the album. It was nice seeing the real voice of Donnie as it is today, he definitely is a gifted singer. But the movie just didn't resonate with me, and that's coming from a music lover.
This was a sweet story, art house for sure, and a bit slow. It is moody, and needed another rewrite and an edit to pick up the pacing. As is, the story does not do the massive talent onscreen justice. And they are excellent, so it is the direction that is the problem. Too slow, too disconnected and belabored. It is the pacing of the writer/director that is the problem.
Too many scenes of people doing nothing, driving, partying in the distance for too long, and on and on.
Casey is clearly brilliant as usual. He is really the king of understated performances, and suprise talents, like being a musician.
Basically it is a quiet, understated story, running a bit too slow.
Too many scenes of people doing nothing, driving, partying in the distance for too long, and on and on.
Casey is clearly brilliant as usual. He is really the king of understated performances, and suprise talents, like being a musician.
Basically it is a quiet, understated story, running a bit too slow.
With its toe-tapping music and sincere performances, Dreamin' Wild definitely entertained me and I believe will enrapture pop-rock fans as well as those who have never heard of Donnie and Joe Emerson. The film tells a true story with immense heart. It is shot elegantly and the story is fascinating; the at-times flat narration is the only chink in Dreamin Wild's armor.
Dreamin' Wild opens in the rural Pacific Northwest, as singer/songwriter Donnie Emerson (Casey Affleck) and his family, are approached by a representative from Light in the Attic, who says he thinks the album Donnie and his brother Joe (Walton Goggins) recorded as teenagers is the next big hit. When the album, also named Dreamin' Wild, makes its rounds, it is hailed by music critics as a lost masterpiece. And whereas the brothers see this stroke of luck as a second chance for stardom, it also unmoors other deep-seated emotions, fears, and hopes, as Donnie, Joe, and the family come to terms with the past, present and possible future.
The moving story is shot with clarity, care and craft; the lighting and framing do justice to the Emersons' bucolic hometown as well as their eclectic and ethereal 'jam space.' Casey Affleck has somewhat patented the 'damaged man exploring his trauma' trope, perhaps because of his real-life experience fending off his demons with alcoholism. That takes nothing away from his deep performance as Donnie in Dreamin' Wild. His portrayal of emotional damage and hope is enough to keep you gripped. Walton Goggins is equally spectacular. Every dialogue-heavy scene is followed by the brothers jamming, and then another dialogue-heavy scene; this format gets a little tiring by the 60-minute mark, but the plot developments and emotional performances redeem the film's at-times slow pace.
Dreamin' Wild encourages following your dreams but staying grounded, being hopeful but never forgetting where you've come from, and caring for your family and yourself.
I give Dreamin' Wild 4 out of 5 stars. By Eshaan M., KIDS FIRST!
Dreamin' Wild opens in the rural Pacific Northwest, as singer/songwriter Donnie Emerson (Casey Affleck) and his family, are approached by a representative from Light in the Attic, who says he thinks the album Donnie and his brother Joe (Walton Goggins) recorded as teenagers is the next big hit. When the album, also named Dreamin' Wild, makes its rounds, it is hailed by music critics as a lost masterpiece. And whereas the brothers see this stroke of luck as a second chance for stardom, it also unmoors other deep-seated emotions, fears, and hopes, as Donnie, Joe, and the family come to terms with the past, present and possible future.
The moving story is shot with clarity, care and craft; the lighting and framing do justice to the Emersons' bucolic hometown as well as their eclectic and ethereal 'jam space.' Casey Affleck has somewhat patented the 'damaged man exploring his trauma' trope, perhaps because of his real-life experience fending off his demons with alcoholism. That takes nothing away from his deep performance as Donnie in Dreamin' Wild. His portrayal of emotional damage and hope is enough to keep you gripped. Walton Goggins is equally spectacular. Every dialogue-heavy scene is followed by the brothers jamming, and then another dialogue-heavy scene; this format gets a little tiring by the 60-minute mark, but the plot developments and emotional performances redeem the film's at-times slow pace.
Dreamin' Wild encourages following your dreams but staying grounded, being hopeful but never forgetting where you've come from, and caring for your family and yourself.
I give Dreamin' Wild 4 out of 5 stars. By Eshaan M., KIDS FIRST!
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesFilmed in Spokane, Washington in 2021.
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- How long is Dreamin' Wild?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 296 290 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 136 391 $ US
- 6 août 2023
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 296 290 $ US
- Durée1 heure 51 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1
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