SYNOPSICS
Sollers Point (2017) is a English movie. Matthew Porterfield has directed this movie. McCaul Lombardi,Jim Belushi,Tom Guiry,Zazie Beetz are the starring of this movie. It was released in 2017. Sollers Point (2017) is considered one of the best Drama movie in India and around the world.
Keith (Lombardi), a small-time drug dealer under house arrest at the home of his father (Belushi) in Baltimore, re-enters a community scarred by unemployment, neglect and deeply entrenched segregation. There, he pushes back against his surrounding limitations as he tries to find a way out of his own internal prison.
Fans of Sollers Point (2017) also like
Sollers Point (2017) Reviews
A mess of nothingness
This movie is one of the worst pieces of cinema, I have had to sit through. The direction is uneven, cinematography is choppy and the sound is so horrible that the 10 people in the theater all stated that they missed 3/4 of the dialogue. The lead has an endearing blue color, hustler charm, but the characters are one dimensional characters. Can't tell if any of these actors are talented given the dialogue they had to work with. Jim Belushi looks embarrassed he took the part. The sound man needs to not work again. You can't hear dialogue, as the sound is so dismally inadequate!!!
Realism Carries This Indie
McCaul Lombardi stars here as Keith, finishing up a 9 months of home detention after a prison stretch. He's living with his father (Jim Belushi), in Baltimore, with whom he has a strained relationship. As with many other films of this genre, Keith will have to decide whether to accept some help from other family members and go back to school, or somehow slide back into his old trouble prone ways. You want to root for him, but he sure doesn't make it easy for you, with his, at times, volatile and impulsive actions. Overall, the movie, written and directed by Matthew Porterfield (Putty Hill) , is carried along by its believable realistic characters and elements, and I was engaged enough to want to know how this was all going to turn out. However, don't expect any easy answers here or things to be eventually all "wrapped up in a neat bow".
Makes Baltimore look pretty bad
Maybe it is not a coincidence that McCaul Lombardi, the star of this as Keith, had a supporting role in "American Honey" , another dreadful film with no real plot. I don't know how films get made without any real story , or plot and little dialogue, but this film is not much more then the lead actor moving from scene to scene and appearing sullen. He does interact with people but in the end I felt nothing at all for his character. There is no tension, no wondering what is going to happen next, because there is no story here. If there are any positives, it comes from the actors in very small roles who are extremely realistic in their portrayal of a very poor and ugly side of Baltimore, but they can't do much in their few minutes of screen time. The only thing I took away from this was the desire to never visit Baltimore.
What's the point
This film is about a young man who is just released from prison. The story is basically non existent, as it only shows the mundane life of a young man who has not got much to live for. It shows him driving from one place to another very frequently, which is rather unexciting. Most of the camera work is from afar, which adds to the detached feeling between the viewers and the characters. I'm afraid I found this film very boring, and I don't quite get the point behind the story, or indeed the point of the story
Gritty, believable tale of ex-con life in a dismal community
I'm not sure what the other reviewers were expecting, but this is an all-too-accurate tale of a ex-con who has come home to face his demons, while he tries to make a new life. No, there are no "superheroes" and no CGI action, if that's what you were looking for! It's all too real and all too believable to the point that that the film is a more than a little scary to watch. The main characters go full force into their roles and if you were expecting a happy ending...well, don't. McCaul Lombardi was an excellent choice to play the lead role of "Keith" and never lets us down in his believability. The film is shot in the vein of "The Wire" and gives an accurate depiction of how sad some area of Baltimore have become. One star subtracted, though, for all the unnecessary use of the tobacco drug, which should have been left of this and all other films!