IMDb RATING
5.7/10
1.3K
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A rebellious teenager navigates his way through the juvenile court system.A rebellious teenager navigates his way through the juvenile court system.A rebellious teenager navigates his way through the juvenile court system.
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- 1 win total
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Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaMark Wahlberg is a producer of this film.
- Crazy creditsEpilogue: "On any given day in the United States, approximately 81,000 children between the ages of 10 and 21 are held in juvenile justice placement. A juvenile detention sentence of 12 months costs roughly $88,000 per child. The average cost for a student to attend public school for a year is $10,259. This film is dedicated to the youth in America who struggle every day. And to the social workers, community workers, advocates, family and policymakers who refuse to give up on them."
Featured review
The twist and the action in the last ten or fifteen minutes give a taste of how truly memorable this film could have been, but the eighty minutes of set-up show how lazy and delusional filmmakers can be. There is an overt reference to A Bronx Tale but far too much harking back to The Breakfast Club and similar, with unlikeable characters in unrealistic situations. Billy would never have got away with the rambling smart-arse speechmaking on show here, but would have been told to sit down and STFU (at best) or, more likely, punched in the mouth.
The distinction between the gangs is underplayed unless it is critical to a plot point, at which time it feels forced. The kindly sheriff, damaged nurse and bullying guard stereotypes rely on one actor in each role, and we are expected to believe they work almost around the clock and with no support. There is no suggestion that education extends beyond reading one book, sport involves more than knocking one character to the ground repeatedly, or rehabilitation extends beyond polishing the boss's car. The annual building project is as believable as finding Elvis on the moon.
Most of the film is made up of red herrings and blind alleys, with very occasional flashbacks that confuse rather than illuminate. Even after seeing the twist I am not convinced I fully understood what they were trying to say but by that stage I was making up my own story.
The end is forced melodrama but need not have been. There was a great film here struggling to get out.
The distinction between the gangs is underplayed unless it is critical to a plot point, at which time it feels forced. The kindly sheriff, damaged nurse and bullying guard stereotypes rely on one actor in each role, and we are expected to believe they work almost around the clock and with no support. There is no suggestion that education extends beyond reading one book, sport involves more than knocking one character to the ground repeatedly, or rehabilitation extends beyond polishing the boss's car. The annual building project is as believable as finding Elvis on the moon.
Most of the film is made up of red herrings and blind alleys, with very occasional flashbacks that confuse rather than illuminate. Even after seeing the twist I am not convinced I fully understood what they were trying to say but by that stage I was making up my own story.
The end is forced melodrama but need not have been. There was a great film here struggling to get out.
- silvio-mitsubishi
- Mar 29, 2019
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Details
Box office
- Budget
- $1,000,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 34 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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