The Dust Factory is an adventure about the love and friendship between two teenagers who help each other through a difficult time in their lives.The Dust Factory is an adventure about the love and friendship between two teenagers who help each other through a difficult time in their lives.The Dust Factory is an adventure about the love and friendship between two teenagers who help each other through a difficult time in their lives.
- Ringmaster
- (as George De La Peña)
- Hope
- (as Ayanna Berkshire-Cruse)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Hayden Panettiere carries the film as Melanie, an energetic girl who wants to live her life in an idealistic fantasy world. Ryan Kelly plays an excellent counterpart, a boy too grounded in the negatives of life to enjoy any of it. The fulcrum between the two is Ryan's grandfather, a wizened man who is trying to help both of them understand life a bit better. How they go about that however, is more than a little odd.
Don't look for a definite plot or smooth story line in this. I can't recommend it as a family film, as the circus and clowns, tentacle scenes (honest) and the casket scene may be frightening to younger children. Those who don't understand the concept of surreal films may miss the points entirely. Older teens and younger adults, as well as the aged are more likely to find it enjoyable. But those looking for neatly-tied strings are likely to be disappointed. There is much symbolism here and not all of it neatly packaged.
I give it 5 stars for maintaining interest, but it was too loosely symbolic and esoteric to woo mainstream audiences. I enjoyed the film, but probably would not have enjoyed it as much were the actors less skilled and charismatic... or might have enjoyed it a bit more if the plot and purpose were tighter.
The primary problem is that those old enough to understand the points, already know the points. Those who might benefit from the lessons taught probably won't understand the points being made. So the writing comes up short from the standpoint of actually reaching its goal audience-- younger teens.
Even so, those who rated this film as terrible (especially the person who said it's the worst film ever made)... I just have to wonder. I can understand a film not meeting someone's personal taste. But to be upset enough about it to post a rant shouting to the world, "I didn't understand a thing here and wish to express my ignorance to the world!" I mean, really? That seems to me far more strange than the film itself. ; }
Overall a decent film with nothing objectionable-- increasingly rare these days. Worth watching for the acting alone, and does have a moral to be learned, if one is willing to pay attention to the dialog.
Ryan Kelley and Hayden Panettiere's performances were amazing, especially Hayden's, as I love the character of Melanie, she's so sweet, and has the ability to make you laugh and cry.
Yes, the storyline was a little predictable, but it didn't stop it being set out well, and performed well.
Imagine mixing "Carnival of Souls" (1962) and "Something Wicked This Way Comes" (1983) with DC Comic's Strange Sports Stories and you'd have a good idea of this movie. Being a family-friendly film, it lacks horror, but there are enough strange things going on and it arguably borders on horror.
The relationship between Melanie (Panettiere) and Ryan (Kelley) is the heart of the story, with Gramps offering sage counsel. While it's neither great nor bad, seeing Panettiere when she was so young (14 during shooting) is a treat. She's just a joy to watch. Moreover, there are some imaginative visuals, like the teens in the field with the circus tent in the background, and the story certainly reaches for depth in its reflections on the nature of death and bereavement.
THE FILM RUNS 1 hours & 20 minutes and was shot in Oregon (Portland, Hillsboro & Mount Hood).
GRADE: B-/C+
The subject matter is deeper then most kids movies - the understanding of pain, losing people we love, and taking that pain to live life and love life to its fullest, not closing up to die. While this may sound like a downer it is not, the characters learn to embrace and recapture their lives in a very upbeat way.
I think one user said sappy - true. But, personally, isn't it nice to watch a film that is uplifting and makes one think about life, and pain, and living - whether you are 9, like my son, or an adult?
Also, this movie has a certain forgein film quality to it. In my opinion.
Did you know
- TriviaGeorge De La Pena's last acting movie
- GoofsWhen Ryan gets home after falling in the river, his hair is still wet but his clothes are dry.
- Quotes
Melanie Lewis: You know, I can still do everything better than you can. Faster - always will.
Ryan Flynn: You can't always win.
Melanie Lewis: I'll always beat *you*.
Ryan Flynn: And I won't mind... I'll never forget you, Mel.
Melanie Lewis: ...you will.
Ryan Flynn: No, I won't. See ya later.
Melanie Lewis: Not later. Just see you.
- SoundtracksSomeone Like You
Written by Luis Bacalov & Anna-Karin Klockar (as Anna Karin Klockar)
Lyrics by Eric Small and Anna-Karin Klockar (as Anna Karin Klockar)
Performed by Hayden Panettiere and Watt White
- How long is The Dust Factory?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $12,311
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $8,000
- Oct 17, 2004
- Gross worldwide
- $12,311
- Runtime
- 1h 39m(99 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1