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Half Nelson

  • 2006
  • R
  • 1h 46m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
94K
YOUR RATING
Ryan Gosling in Half Nelson (2006)
Home Video Trailer from Think Film, Inc
Play trailer2:22
6 Videos
99+ Photos
Coming-of-AgeWorkplace DramaDrama

An inner-city junior high school teacher with a drug habit forms an unlikely friendship with one of his students after she discovers his secret.An inner-city junior high school teacher with a drug habit forms an unlikely friendship with one of his students after she discovers his secret.An inner-city junior high school teacher with a drug habit forms an unlikely friendship with one of his students after she discovers his secret.

  • Director
    • Ryan Fleck
  • Writers
    • Ryan Fleck
    • Anna Boden
  • Stars
    • Ryan Gosling
    • Anthony Mackie
    • Shareeka Epps
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    94K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ryan Fleck
    • Writers
      • Ryan Fleck
      • Anna Boden
    • Stars
      • Ryan Gosling
      • Anthony Mackie
      • Shareeka Epps
    • 235User reviews
    • 167Critic reviews
    • 85Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 29 wins & 48 nominations total

    Videos6

    Half Nelson
    Trailer 2:22
    Half Nelson
    The Rise of Ryan Gosling
    Clip 4:11
    The Rise of Ryan Gosling
    The Rise of Ryan Gosling
    Clip 4:11
    The Rise of Ryan Gosling
    Half Nelson Scene: Turning Point
    Clip 1:06
    Half Nelson Scene: Turning Point
    Half Nelson Scene: On Slide
    Clip 0:57
    Half Nelson Scene: On Slide
    Half Nelson Scene: Chicken Walk
    Clip 1:17
    Half Nelson Scene: Chicken Walk
    Half Nelson Scene: Jokes
    Clip 1:04
    Half Nelson Scene: Jokes

    Photos107

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    Top cast39

    Edit
    Ryan Gosling
    Ryan Gosling
    • Dan Dunne
    Anthony Mackie
    Anthony Mackie
    • Frank
    Shareeka Epps
    Shareeka Epps
    • Drey
    Jeff Lima
    Jeff Lima
    • Roodly
    Nathan Corbett
    Nathan Corbett
    • Terrance
    Tyra Kwao-Vovo
    • Stacy
    Rosemary Ledee
    • Gina
    Tristan Mack Wilds
    Tristan Mack Wilds
    • Jamal
    • (as Tristan Wilds)
    Bryce Silver
    • Bernard
    Kaela C. Pabon
    • Lena
    Erica Rivera
    • Erika
    • (as Erika Rivera)
    Stephanie Bast
    Stephanie Bast
    • Vanessa
    Eleanor Hutchins
    • Simone
    Sebastian Sozzi
    Sebastian Sozzi
    • Javier
    Tina Holmes
    Tina Holmes
    • Rachel
    Karen Chilton
    Karen Chilton
    • Karen
    Kitty
    • Dave - The Cat
    Starla Benford
    Starla Benford
    • Principal Henderson
    • Director
      • Ryan Fleck
    • Writers
      • Ryan Fleck
      • Anna Boden
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews235

    7.194.2K
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    Featured reviews

    8ruby_fff

    The 'dialectics' indie filmmakers Ryan Fleck and Anna Boden created in "Half Nelson" is realized by Ryan Gosling and Shareeka Epps' unarguably nuanced performances

    Ryan Gosling is truly amazing in his film role deliveries. His breakthrough role in "The Believer" 2001 was explosively intense. He consistently gives integral reflective portrayals, even for a departure romantic role in director Nick Cassavetes' "The Notebook" 2004, he was absolutely convincing as Noah who loves Rachel McAdam's Allie to the core. Here in "Half Nelson," he appears to disappear into Dan Dunne, a high school teacher with an ideal and a crack addiction problem. That sure sounds contradictory in terms: a teacher being a role model, while drug addiction a totally unacceptable behavior. As Dunne wrote on the blackboard in the beginning: 'Dialectics,' the film "Half Nelson" is in itself dialectics demonstrated.

    Gosling's Mr. Dunne the history 'teach' doubling also as basketball coach, meeting (a solid matching delivery from) Shareeka Epps' Drey, the 13-year old student who 'found' him and 'witnessed' his secret - theirs is a relationship, naturally portrayed, of two 'opposing' forces as dialectics as can be. I felt Drey is the primary force that 'helped' Dunne's secondary force to yield and together, they created a contradiction anew as life goes on.

    I remember from a 1969 book, a quote that might describe the heart of "Half Nelson": "Contradictions are the source of all movement and of all life. All things are in themselves contradictory and it is this principle, more than any other, which expresses the essence of things."

    In a way, contradictory yet similar: Dunne and Drey both are 'on their own' trying to hang on, to manage the conflicts in their life's journey. Do we need all the answers in life? Do we have to know why someone behave as he/she does or something happen as it did? Director Ryan Fleck and co-writer/editor/producer Anna Boden tried not to 'over-explain anything'. Sometimes the answer can simply be: "I don't know."

    "Half Nelson" is an ambitious film. Besides 'comments' on educational system, single parent family strife, Dan's addiction predicament, the script also managed to include political viewpoints unobtrusively expressed through talking heads of single student reciting historical civil rights movement events. The 'R' rating does indicate some intimate scenes, clever inter-cuts juxtaposing what the two forces were each doing at the moment. Music (by "Broken-Social-Scene") is timely applied at certain segments but sparingly. Well-rounded supporting cast, especially Anthony Mackie as Frank the 'friendly' dealer who may want to do right by Drey but only in the way he knows how within the realms of selling drugs (reminds me of w-d Boaz Yakin's "Fresh" 1994, brilliant debut performance by Sean Nelson as the 12-year old interacting with a dealer 'mentor').

    Kudos to all involved on "Half Nelson". The film was shot in Brooklyn, New York. Thanks to ThinkFilm for being the distributor (documentary: Spellbound; Murderball; March of the Penguins; drama: The Last Kiss - Italy; Kontroll - Hungary; Gus Van Sant's Gerry).
    8littlemartinarocena

    Awaking To Ryan Gosling

    Ryan Gosling made happen what happens only once every so often. Made me look at what I seen before under a new magnifying light. He took me with him and showed me, with the most astonishing clarity, the complexity of a talented man dragged down by a legacy of good intentions and addiction. We're permitted to visit his family once and we understand what he's fighting with without any weapons. He doesn't blame anyone but he's the result of his own DNA and he knows it. His bright moments, the explanation of what History is for instance, is a glimpse into the man he could actually be, fully. The humanity that Ryan Gosling lends to his character on his darker moments it's as chillingly real as it is moving. The chemistry he establishes with the wonderful Shareeka Epps is as powerful as the one he established with me. I want to meet him, I want to meet Dan and while I was thinking that I realize I know him already. He lives next door to me, he's related to me, I was his friend. This is what superb performances do. They re-awake you.
    Kirpianuscus

    honest perspective

    I am teacher. And I saw this film from the angle of my job. As a realistic portrait of a special universe. As honest image of the essence of a work. As one of the most inspired performances of Ryan Gosling. As a great film. About the deep reality behind the appearences. A film about truth. And eulogy of friendship. Short, a teacher, his student and the fight against him. Enough for few questions about near reality and the choices around it.
    9howard.schumann

    Gritty and sensitive

    Set in Brooklyn, New York where he currently lives, Ryan Fleck's first full-length feature, Half Nelson, is a gritty, sensitive, and emotionally harrowing film that meticulously avoids the inspirational clichés of many teacher-student films and the obligatory violence of films set in the ghetto. The title is derived from a wrestling move in which you turn an attacker's strength back on him. In the case of Dan Dunne (Ryan Gosling), an idealistic eight-grade history teacher in an inner city school, he turns the attack on himself, inspiring his students by day and drugging himself at night with crack cocaine.

    Dan is a well-liked teacher and basketball coach whose parents (Deborah Rush and Jay O. Sanders) were liberal activists during the 60s and 70s, participating in protests against the Vietnam War but have now substituted alcoholism for political passion. Like his parents, he wants to make an impact on the world but is disillusioned with the current political climate and, out of frustration and fatigue, (like many on the Left today) has drifted into a self-induced stupor. Believing in social justice and that society can be changed through education, he teaches history, to the chagrin of the school's administrator, in the form of Hegelian dialectic, showing that change results from a clash of opposites.

    Dan shows his students videos of seminal events from the last fifty years such as the 1954 Brown vs. Board of Education ruling that paved the way for desegregation of the schools, clips from the civil rights movement, and Mario Savio speaking on the Berkeley campus during the Free Speech Movement. To its credit, the events in the film do not occur in a political vacuum but attempts to tie in the failed protests of the Left to Dan's drug habit are not entirely persuasive. Dunne's life begins to spiral out of control when one of his students, thirteen-year old Drey (Shareeka Epps), discovers him in the girl's bathroom passed out from ingesting cocaine. Instead of becoming frightened or angry, Drey brings him water and helps him to gradually come down from his high.

    Drey comes from a family in which her mother works a double shift and is rarely at home, her father is out of town, and her older brother is in prison for selling drugs, but she is mature and street-wise beyond her age. She promises to keep his secret and both find that their unlikely friendship satisfies an emotional need that Drey cannot find with her classmates and Dan cannot find with other adults. He is dating a fellow teacher (Monique Curnen) but his behavior with her is erratic and his political speeches and drug habits soon turn her off. A former girl friend from his period of rehabilitation (which he said didn't work for him) tells him that she is now getting married which pushes him further into a downward trajectory.

    The emotional highlight of the film is a confrontation between Dunne and Frank (Anthony Mackie), a suave drug dealer and associate of Drey's older brother who recruits Drey to be his collector. While Dan wants to steer Drey in the right direction, he is hardly a role model and the results, while promising, are inconclusive. Although the premise of the film is somewhat implausible, Gosling's performance of the charming but flawed teacher is completely credible, so nuanced and touching that we root for him in spite of his capacity for self-destruction. Shareeka Epps is equally convincing in her powerfully understated performance as his tough but sensitive young friend. Co-written by Anna Boden and supported by an outstanding original score by Broken Social Scene, Half Nelson "stands and delivers" one of the finest films of the year.
    8he_who_leads

    The Ryan Gosling Film

    Dan (Ryan Gosling) is a drug-addicted high school history teacher. Drey (Shareeka Epps) is one of his students, who can see herself possibly following in her brother's footsteps and working for a local drug dealer. Dan and Drey strike up a friendship.

    Dan is a smart, fundamentally decent man leading a life of quiet desperation. His ex-gf, Rachel (Tina Holmes), tells him that some people get better, and Dan is adamant in his response. Not him. Change is not for him. To another girl, he explains how he tried rehab, but it doesn't work for him. And yet Dan's desire for change is shown in his lessons to his students. He constantly describes opposites - up and down, left and right - and talks about change. From one breath to your next breath, change has happened. And yet Dan's affliction just provides more and more of the same.

    The film is all about Ryan Gosling, who gives us a complete portrait of his character. You just can't take your eyes off of this guy. Whether babbling under the influence or talking with real passion to his students or just sitting quietly saying nothing at all, Gosling shows us a man, who has a lot to give, but is held down by his affliction. The out-of-nowhere flashes of humour and the many moments of vulnerability completely endear us to Dan. His friendship with Drey arouses moral instincts in him that brings his self-loathing and helplessness more to the surface. We understand Dan, and our understanding of him is mirrored in the eyes of all the supporting characters, played out by a perfect ensemble cast. So much is conveyed just in the briefest character exchanges.

    So the film succeeds with strong performances and making sure all the pieces fit together with respect and care. And yet the finished puzzle isn't really as gripping as it should be. Maybe because we've been through this material before, or maybe because this is a film that lives through its many small moments and observations. With tense character-driven material like this, I was sort of expecting more flash and meltdown, but this isn't that sort of film. This is a film, where you can admire the focus, commitment, and quality, but its a slow burn - not a big jolt to the system.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The film was shot in 23 days and finished one day ahead of schedule.
    • Quotes

      Dan: Change moves in spirals, not circles. For example, the sun goes up and then it goes down. But everytime that happens, what do you get? You get a new day. You get a new one. When you breathe, you inhale and you exhale, but every single time that you do that you're a little bit different then the one before. We're always changing. And its important to know that there are some changes you can't control and that there are others you can.

    • Crazy credits
      The very beginning and very end of the credits are both shown over the sound of Dunn imitating a trumpet playing a tune.
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert: World Trade Center/Step Up/Scoop/Half Nelson (2006)
    • Soundtracks
      Stars & Sons
      Written and Performed by Broken Social Scene

      Published by Arts & Crafts Music

      Licensed Courtesy of Arts & Crafts Records

      From the album "You Forgot It in People"

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    FAQ

    • How long is Half Nelson?
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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 22, 2006 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • StudioCanal International (France)
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • La otra cara de Nelson
    • Filming locations
      • New York Hall of Science, 111th Street, Flushing Meadows Park, Queens, New York City, New York, USA(field trip)
    • Production companies
      • Hunting Lane Films
      • Journeyman Pictures
      • Silverwood Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $700,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $2,697,938
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $53,983
      • Aug 13, 2006
    • Gross worldwide
      • $4,660,481
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 46 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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