A woman's life is turned upside down when her criminal parents invite an outsider to join them on a major heist they're planning.A woman's life is turned upside down when her criminal parents invite an outsider to join them on a major heist they're planning.A woman's life is turned upside down when her criminal parents invite an outsider to join them on a major heist they're planning.
- Awards
- 4 wins & 9 nominations
Michael Twaine
- Abe
- (as Michael J. Twaine)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaAccording to Miranda July, Evan Rachel Wood's distinctive voice in this film is her natural voice. Wood received vocal training throughout her career to raise it, but decided to revert to her natural voice for the role.
- GoofsDuring the first earthquake in the street, a fishing wire used to shake objects is visible outside the convenience store.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Film Junk Podcast: Episode 769: Kajillionaire (2020)
- SoundtracksMr. Lonely
Written by Gene Allan and Bobby Vinton
Performed by Bobby Vinton
Courtesy of Epic Records
By arrangement with Sony Music Entertainment
Featured review
A delightfully weird movie directed by --- no surprises there! --- Miranda July.
This is the kind of movie that could never succeed without actors who know how to play the material just right, so let's start with Richard Jenkins and the unrecognizable Debra Winger, shall we? Could these two be any better? They play a married couple (or at least a couple) who try to live off the grid but in the middle of Los Angeles, a tricky business. They have all sorts of conspiracies about how the government, big business, etc. is trying to mind control people, so they don't do things like shop in stores, have an online presence, bathe, things like that. Instead, they spend every waking moment coming up with cockamamie schemes to steal and rob whatever they can. They're raising their daughter (Evan Rachel Wood) in this environment, and things seem to be going ok, or as ok as such a situation could ever be, when the family dynamic is upset by the addition of a normal person from the actual world (Gina Rodriguez) who wakes Wood up to all the ways her parents have failed to show her love or even affection.
If you are the kind of viewer who demands realism from your movies, this one will try your patience. There are at least a couple of events in this film (like what happens to Rodriguez's apartment, and those of you who've seen it know what I'm talking about) that not just strain credibility but try mighty hard to entirely break it. But the thing is, they don't. They feel credible within the world July creates in her movie, a world that's just a hair out of kilter with the world as we actually know it. And for me, everything worked.
Well, almost everything. I didn't love the lesbian themes that become increasingly prominent as the movie progresses, not because I have a problem with lesbian themes in general, but rather because they didn't feel well integrated into this particular story. But the movie is about loving and being loved in return, and there are all kinds of love, so in the end that too mostly worked for me.
Evan Rachel Wood is sensational, but this movie is stolen by, of all people, Gina Rodriguez. Who would ever have thought?
One of 2020's standout movies.
Grade: A
This is the kind of movie that could never succeed without actors who know how to play the material just right, so let's start with Richard Jenkins and the unrecognizable Debra Winger, shall we? Could these two be any better? They play a married couple (or at least a couple) who try to live off the grid but in the middle of Los Angeles, a tricky business. They have all sorts of conspiracies about how the government, big business, etc. is trying to mind control people, so they don't do things like shop in stores, have an online presence, bathe, things like that. Instead, they spend every waking moment coming up with cockamamie schemes to steal and rob whatever they can. They're raising their daughter (Evan Rachel Wood) in this environment, and things seem to be going ok, or as ok as such a situation could ever be, when the family dynamic is upset by the addition of a normal person from the actual world (Gina Rodriguez) who wakes Wood up to all the ways her parents have failed to show her love or even affection.
If you are the kind of viewer who demands realism from your movies, this one will try your patience. There are at least a couple of events in this film (like what happens to Rodriguez's apartment, and those of you who've seen it know what I'm talking about) that not just strain credibility but try mighty hard to entirely break it. But the thing is, they don't. They feel credible within the world July creates in her movie, a world that's just a hair out of kilter with the world as we actually know it. And for me, everything worked.
Well, almost everything. I didn't love the lesbian themes that become increasingly prominent as the movie progresses, not because I have a problem with lesbian themes in general, but rather because they didn't feel well integrated into this particular story. But the movie is about loving and being loved in return, and there are all kinds of love, so in the end that too mostly worked for me.
Evan Rachel Wood is sensational, but this movie is stolen by, of all people, Gina Rodriguez. Who would ever have thought?
One of 2020's standout movies.
Grade: A
- evanston_dad
- Jan 20, 2021
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Giàu Nứt Đố Đổ Vách
- Filming locations
- 2529 East 55th Street, Huntington Park, California, USA(Robert, Theresa, and Old Dolio's living space)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $531,430
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $215,675
- Sep 27, 2020
- Gross worldwide
- $1,285,775
- Runtime1 hour 44 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content