IMDb RATING
5.8/10
9.4K
YOUR RATING
A devoted husband in a marriage of convenience is forced to confront his secret life.A devoted husband in a marriage of convenience is forced to confront his secret life.A devoted husband in a marriage of convenience is forced to confront his secret life.
- Awards
- 2 nominations total
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
5.89.4K
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Featured reviews
An Uneven Average Film That Is Most Notable For Being One of Robin Williams Last Performances
Boulevard is not a particularly great movie, and suffers from its utter generic-ness and lack of ambition. The absolute best thing I can say about the film, however, is it contains one of Robin Williams's last acting performances, and in spite of such an average picture, he manages to turn in a fine, very restrained, dramatic performance. The kind we had come to expect from Williams.
The set-up of the story is simple. A bank clerk, named Nolan (played by Robin Williams, lives a pretty standard life. He and his wife (played by Kathy Baker) have set-up their marriage as a way to distract themselves from the outside world. All of this changes one night while driving. Nolan encounters a troubled young man, named Leo (played by Roberto Aguire), and his entire life changes, as he comes to embrace who he really is, and even his own sexuality.
Boulevard is a pretty atypical film. It's well directed by Dito Montiel (who also made Guide To Recognizing Your Saints) and the script is okay, even having some genuine laughs in it. The performances all around, not just Williams, are fine, including Kathy Baker as his wife, Roberto Acquire as the troubled youth he befriends and Bob Odenkirk in a small role as one of his accomplices and friend named Winston. It's really Robin Williams who shines through though. This may not be one of his absolute best performances, but for being one of his final roles, it isn't a bad role either. Williams isn't being manically over the top (overly dramatic) in this film. He's showing the level of restraint that he's usually showed in some of his best roles like Good Will Hunting and Dead Poets Society. For example, when he confronts his wife after missing dinner, instead of screaming and hollering, he tries to calm her down, and is very resourceful as playing it cool.
Boulevard is a rather short film with less than 90 minutes. The director clearly has skill in making a competent picture, but aside from Williams's performance, I wasn't drawn into much of the story. For being one of Robin Williams's last performances, it does make me sad, but either way, it was a good role for him to go out on.
The set-up of the story is simple. A bank clerk, named Nolan (played by Robin Williams, lives a pretty standard life. He and his wife (played by Kathy Baker) have set-up their marriage as a way to distract themselves from the outside world. All of this changes one night while driving. Nolan encounters a troubled young man, named Leo (played by Roberto Aguire), and his entire life changes, as he comes to embrace who he really is, and even his own sexuality.
Boulevard is a pretty atypical film. It's well directed by Dito Montiel (who also made Guide To Recognizing Your Saints) and the script is okay, even having some genuine laughs in it. The performances all around, not just Williams, are fine, including Kathy Baker as his wife, Roberto Acquire as the troubled youth he befriends and Bob Odenkirk in a small role as one of his accomplices and friend named Winston. It's really Robin Williams who shines through though. This may not be one of his absolute best performances, but for being one of his final roles, it isn't a bad role either. Williams isn't being manically over the top (overly dramatic) in this film. He's showing the level of restraint that he's usually showed in some of his best roles like Good Will Hunting and Dead Poets Society. For example, when he confronts his wife after missing dinner, instead of screaming and hollering, he tries to calm her down, and is very resourceful as playing it cool.
Boulevard is a rather short film with less than 90 minutes. The director clearly has skill in making a competent picture, but aside from Williams's performance, I wasn't drawn into much of the story. For being one of Robin Williams's last performances, it does make me sad, but either way, it was a good role for him to go out on.
Courageous effort from Williams
I liked this final Robin Williams film mostly because it shows how great an actor he really was. Williams stars as Nolan, a very nice, kind, sweet, unassuming 60 year old gentleman, who happens to be gay, but has kept himself in the closet for 50 years. His performance exudes happy frustration with his very being, making you wonder what really goes on behind the closed doors in his mind and home. How many stories in real life, Williams own included, have shown you seemingly happy people on the outside who, on the inside, can't take life anymore.
Nolan has reached this point by doing what was expected of him. He has worked in the same bank for 25 years. He lives with his wife Joy (Kathy Baker) whom he loves, but they don't do much other than have dinner and brief words. There is no intimacy, it seems they have never shared the same bed - no children. Obviously his wife must have known the truth. It makes me wonder why this issue never came to a flashpoint earlier.
This boring, risk-free life takes a change when Williams decides to chat up a male prostitute Leo (Roberto Aguirre) when he drives home past this known prostitute bridge. Why he chose this kid, it's never clear. Maybe he was thinking he could help this kid, who apparently used drugs, so maybe not a good choice, to lead a nice, happy, openly gay life. It's never clear.
The story goes on, a bit slowly, and Williams has to start building a web of lies to cover his contact with Leo. The consequences you might imagine are inevitable, but the ending offers you hope that, at least for Leo and Joy, perhaps things are working out for the best.
This is not a masterpiece, nor a must-see, but since we know it is William's last performance, you should see this performance that will remind you how great an actor we have lost. Now go out and rent Good Will Hunting or Good Morning Vietnam or Dead Poet's Society!!! Enjoy.
Nolan has reached this point by doing what was expected of him. He has worked in the same bank for 25 years. He lives with his wife Joy (Kathy Baker) whom he loves, but they don't do much other than have dinner and brief words. There is no intimacy, it seems they have never shared the same bed - no children. Obviously his wife must have known the truth. It makes me wonder why this issue never came to a flashpoint earlier.
This boring, risk-free life takes a change when Williams decides to chat up a male prostitute Leo (Roberto Aguirre) when he drives home past this known prostitute bridge. Why he chose this kid, it's never clear. Maybe he was thinking he could help this kid, who apparently used drugs, so maybe not a good choice, to lead a nice, happy, openly gay life. It's never clear.
The story goes on, a bit slowly, and Williams has to start building a web of lies to cover his contact with Leo. The consequences you might imagine are inevitable, but the ending offers you hope that, at least for Leo and Joy, perhaps things are working out for the best.
This is not a masterpiece, nor a must-see, but since we know it is William's last performance, you should see this performance that will remind you how great an actor we have lost. Now go out and rent Good Will Hunting or Good Morning Vietnam or Dead Poet's Society!!! Enjoy.
Robin Williams nice job
Nolan Mack (Robin Williams) is a stiff banker married to Joy (Kathy Baker). They seem devoted but he's been a closeted homosexual for all of his adult life. His father is in a nursing home. His best friend Winston (Bob Odenkirk) has a young girlfriend. He is being primed to be the manager of a new bank branch. One night, he cruises a boulevard and runs over male-prostitute Leo. He tries to take care of Leo who is under the thumb of his pimp Eddie.
Robin Williams does a good job. There is a neediness in Nolan that is both off-putting and compelling. The story is almost quaint by today's standard. The problem is that he could come out to everybody and there wouldn't be any damage. Times have basically passed by this movie. Ten years ago, this would be edgy. Today, his homosexuality could actually help in his banking job. It would probably be a relief to Joy to let the secret out into the open and Winston would throw him a party.
Robin Williams does a good job. There is a neediness in Nolan that is both off-putting and compelling. The story is almost quaint by today's standard. The problem is that he could come out to everybody and there wouldn't be any damage. Times have basically passed by this movie. Ten years ago, this would be edgy. Today, his homosexuality could actually help in his banking job. It would probably be a relief to Joy to let the secret out into the open and Winston would throw him a party.
A love story where sex is not a consideration.
I watched this as a streaming movie on Amazon. Good movie for the patient, it is very likely Williams' last movie role, filmed just a bit over a year before he took his own life.
Robin Williams is Nashville banker Nolan Mack, 60, and long time married to the woman he loves. He is very organized and reliable, and in fact watches over his very sick dad who is in a medical facility. His boss at work tells him, after 25 years at that branch, the big boss is considering him for a branch manager job at a different location.
But he has been carrying a secret since he was 12, in his own nature he is homosexual. As we meet him he and his wife have different bedrooms in their nice upper-middle class home, they show kind affection and profess love for each other but mostly live two separate lives. They talk about going on a cruise but his heart doesn't seem to be in it.
Everything changes for Nolan when he makes a U-turn on the boulevard on his way from home and almost runs over a young man, a street hustler. Nolan is mysteriously and calmly attracted to him. They end up going to a seedy place, the hustler offers sex for money but Nolan isn't interested in that, he just wants to visit and talk. Eventually Nolan attempts to get the young man some work at a restaurant, and discussed his going to school, all in vain. Is Nolan trying to be the father that he had needed when he was a young man, struggling with his own homosexuality?
Williams is great in a difficult role within a difficult subject. His character here reminded me some of his character "Sy the photo guy" in "One Hour Photo". Robin Williams was a very funny guy but I think he did his best work in dramatic roles. He really was one of the best actors of my generation.
Robin Williams is Nashville banker Nolan Mack, 60, and long time married to the woman he loves. He is very organized and reliable, and in fact watches over his very sick dad who is in a medical facility. His boss at work tells him, after 25 years at that branch, the big boss is considering him for a branch manager job at a different location.
But he has been carrying a secret since he was 12, in his own nature he is homosexual. As we meet him he and his wife have different bedrooms in their nice upper-middle class home, they show kind affection and profess love for each other but mostly live two separate lives. They talk about going on a cruise but his heart doesn't seem to be in it.
Everything changes for Nolan when he makes a U-turn on the boulevard on his way from home and almost runs over a young man, a street hustler. Nolan is mysteriously and calmly attracted to him. They end up going to a seedy place, the hustler offers sex for money but Nolan isn't interested in that, he just wants to visit and talk. Eventually Nolan attempts to get the young man some work at a restaurant, and discussed his going to school, all in vain. Is Nolan trying to be the father that he had needed when he was a young man, struggling with his own homosexuality?
Williams is great in a difficult role within a difficult subject. His character here reminded me some of his character "Sy the photo guy" in "One Hour Photo". Robin Williams was a very funny guy but I think he did his best work in dramatic roles. He really was one of the best actors of my generation.
Very poetic that this is the final Robin Williams movie. It's almost his way of telling us how he was dealing with his problems.
"Sometimes it's nice to be somewhere else." Nolan (Williams) has a great wife and a huge promotion coming at his job. He has everything going for him, but he has been keeping a secret from everyone his whole life. When he meets Leo (Aguire) he finally finds a way to be himself, but he still struggles with revealing himself. There are some movies that are made better by casting choices. There are some things that a person is the perfect choice for and you can't imagine watching it without them (Gandolfini in the Sopranos). This movie is the rare combination of those plus real world events that makes the movie actually transcend the screen and makes it feel more real and it has that much more of an impact. In this movie Robin Williams plays a character that struggle with something that he has to keep hidden from everyone while trying to be who they want him to be. The fact that he himself was trying to hide depression from everyone while trying to still be "Robin Williams" really adds an extra dimension to the character and makes the movie all the more emotional. The movie itself if just OK, but the real world events are really what makes this a movie to watch. Overall, very poetic that this is the final live action Robin Williams movie. It is almost his way of telling us how he was dealing with his problems. For that reason I recommend this. I give this a B+.
Did you know
- TriviaLast dramatic movie of Robin Williams.
- GoofsNolan's monitor on his office desk has no video cable attached.
- Quotes
Nolan Mack: People leave, you know? But for some people, it just doesn't seem fair.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Half in the Bag: 2015 Re-Cap (So Far) (2015)
- SoundtracksDo With The Rain
Written by David Wittman
Performed by The Bay Cities Trio
Courtesy Walrus Monster Publishing
- How long is Boulevard?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $126,150
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $7,000
- Jul 12, 2015
- Gross worldwide
- $321,787
- Runtime
- 1h 28m(88 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content






