David Gordon Green makes a stunning directorial debut with GEORGE WASHINGTON, a highly poetic drama that tells the story of the inhabitants of a small, impoverished southern American town. Focusing on a group of five adolescent friends--George (Donald Holden), Nasia (Candace Evanofski), Buddy (Curtis Cotton III), Vernon (Damian .. Read more
| Starring | Curtis Cotton III, Candace Evanofski, Rachael Handy, Donald Holden |
|---|---|
| Director | David Gordon Green |
| Genres | Drama |
loading...
David Gordon Green makes a stunning directorial debut with GEORGE WASHINGTON, a highly poetic drama that tells the story of the inhabitants of a small, impoverished southern American town. Focusing on a group of five adolescent friends--George (Donald Holden), Nasia (Candace Evanofski), Buddy (Curtis Cotton III), Vernon (Damian Jewan Lee), and Sonya (Rachel Handy)--Green uses the town's barren landscape to provide a bleak, yet beautiful, backdrop for their day-to-day lives. After Nasia breaks up with Buddy for George, an introverted youth with an extremely sensitive fontanel, tragedy strikes and the friends are forced to come to terms with the situation. The resulting internal struggles send each individual into a search for redemption in intensely personal, yet very different, ways.
Green's film is reminiscent of Terrence Malick's THE THIN RED LINE in its potent blend of naturalistic acting, lush photography, and nostalgic voice-over. The 24-year-old shows a maturity that many older directors rarely attain. It is this overriding optimism that makes the film such an uplifting moviegoing experience, even amidst such somber circumstances. Also, there is an understated humor--most notably Paul Schneider's portrayal of Rico Rice--that keeps matters hopeful throughout. GEORGE WASHINGTON is an honest, thoughtful, and deeply transcendent motion picture.
| Starring | Curtis Cotton III, Candace Evanofski, Rachael Handy, Donald Holden, Damien Jewan Lee, Eddie Rouse, Paul Schneider |
|---|---|
| Director | David Gordon Green |
| Studio | BFI VIDEO |
| Run time | DVD: 1 hr 26 mins Watch now: 1 hr 29 mins |
| Certificate | DVD: |
| Genres | Drama |
| Language | DVD: English |
| Hearing-impaired | English |
| Released | DVD: 22 Apr 2002 Watch now: 30 Jun 2009 Production year: 2000 |
| Watch now | Subscribe and watch this as part of an unlimited package. |
| Format | DVD |
Rarely has the eccentric seemed so everyday or the desolate felt so welcoming as in this remarkable tale of social deprivation and juvenile innocence. Basking in its widescreen lyricism, the story — about a small-town black boy who refuses to allow the fragility of his skull to interfere with his superheroic ambitions — unfolds at its own gentle pace. This allows debutant director David Gordon Green to concentrate on the performances of his non-professional cast, who deliver their part-improvised lines with a delightfully unforced sense of poetry. Eschewing politics in favour of an extraordinary dream-like style, this takes the rite-of-passage picture to a whole new level.
"...The picture [is] bursting with talent from its young cast....Mr. Green has found a style that's defiantly his own....This may be the best-photographed film of the year..."
This debut film from David Gordon Green is a slow, impressionistic one, with reverential or fetishist - attention paid to the physical aspects of colour and sound.
The final work looks gorgeous, full of golden light and bruised shadows, with a delicate guitar soundtrack, that marks a world a million miles away from, say, that of Larry Clarks Kids.
Theres no rap music and very little swearing in this sunshine tale of young black kids and white railroad engineers in North Carolina. Instead of hand-held realism, we get startling and oddly affecting soliloquies from the youngsters, which punctuate the drifting visuals.
The story is told from the point of view of a precocious 12 year-old female narrator, and takes in the tragic event that is at the centre of one particular summer, and its effect on the semi-eponymous George.
He is physically extremely vulnerable, due to a rare physiological condition, yet ends up in a cape and hat; a homespun, Carolina-style superman. Whilst others talk, or talk around, what is happening, George by chance or by design says little, but ends up a hero through deeds rather than words.
There is more than a little guilt in George as well, yet Green backs away from any explicit, un-reflected, snapshots of plot or psyche. Instead, he trusts to impressions to speak, and this trust pays off providing you dont expect to hear everything in one go.
The story centres around a fragment of the life of an introspective 13 year old boy, George, and his involvement in the accidental death of one of his friends. The film is about choices, guilt, redemption and the thin line between childhood and adulthood. It's beautifully shot, sensitively handled and superbly acted by the mostly young cast. The pace is accordlingly subtle.
The (fictitious) super-strong pot “Pineapple Express” plays a key role in Seth Rogen’s new film. It’s a bond between process server Dale Denton – Rogen – and his generous, eager-to-please dealer, Saul (James Franco). Saul is so excited by this new brand he’s desperate to share it with someone. If Dale isn’t a friend per se, at least he’s his most loyal customer. The Express lives up to the hype, apparently, because it’s not long after Read more