DVD The Off Hours
Run time: 93 min
Rating: 6.1
Genres: Drama
Director: Megan Griffiths
Writers: Megan Griffiths
Stars: Amy Seimetz, Ross Partridge, Tony Doupe
|
|
Storyline You’re awake when everyone else is asleep. You’re standing still as traffic is whipping by at 70mph. You see dusk and dawn everyday because they happen on your way to a time clock and then to a bed. Your off hours are spent trying to figure out why you’re here, whether you want to stay, and how to leave. Written by The Off Hours |
|
Plot Keywords: diner, truck driver, waitress, title directed by female, small town | |
Details: Country: USA Release Date: 22 January 2011 (USA) |
|
DVD The Off Hours
previous post
4 comments
I saw this film yesterday at a festival, and felt compelled to write a review after seeing the HD trailer on youtube overtaken by trolls and receiving some rather undeserving comments. So here's a short list of what I made of it:
Pros:
– solid acting/directing
– lilting, atmospheric and overall beautiful soundtrack
Cons:
– most movie-goers may find the pacing a tad slow to the point of being boring; story is barely kept moving by events which do not culminate into anything huge or dramatic
Other notes (good or bad, these are probably a matter of personal taste):
– film permeated by a low-budget, moody, night-lit feel, a world of twilight hours and rain-streaked highways, drifters and vagabonds, stagnant coffee, greasy gasoline, and illicit love
-actors/actresses/director unfamiliar but good
– one could argue that the film is made up of a series of character vignettes; plot is entirely character-driven as opposed to story-driven
– characters are neither entirely sympathetic nor hateful; life for them simply seems seeped in a dull, sluggish immobility. Who they are and the lethargy of their lives mold the film and pacing throughout.
That's all I can think of for now.
To conclude, I personally didn't find the movie very depressing at all, even though the characters are all down-and-out types suffering from this-or-that problem, and the ending is actually a hopeful one. Overall I liked it. So for those with an open mind, or if you're into mood pieces, I would recommend this for you, and if you were unsure about watching this possibly after seeing nasty comments about it elsewhere, I hope my review will help you to make a more reasoned decision.
6.8 to 7.5-ish/10 for me.
The Off Hours was by far the best movie I've seen at the Seattle International Film Festival. It is so powerful and moving. Breathtaking scenery and a stunning cast paired with an amazing soundtrack. Life in a dead end town, pure and simple.
The characters are so depressing in such a beautiful way. It's rare to go to a film that really changes the way you feel when you leave the theater. I left feeling the way every one of those characters felt, as if I was part of the film.
I would highly recommend it and see it again for sure.
I give it a 10 out of 10 easily.
I saw this soon after seeing "Think of Me", another film about someone living at the less hopeful fringes of American life, so it was kind of a one-two punch, morale wise. Norman Mailer portrayed this lower class, small town life beautifully if more dramatically in "The Executioner's Song", showing how Gary Gilmore was just the poison flower of a whole weed-riddled garden. Here we see a waitress whose main pleasure seems to be having impromptu sex in bathrooms, whose closest relationship is an ambivalent one with her foster "brother" (drifting along on unemployment). Others around her have lazy sex, drink, generally just get by. To the degree that there's an inciting incident here, it's when she meets a slightly older man with more substance to him. But the real "story" is just the close-up view of these small-town down-and-outers going nowhere. There's a general mild hopelessness to this whole world which is certainly that of millions of Americans living get-by lives. It's never very compelling, which may be the point. Still, if one stays interested in these characters from the start, it is because they all have something engaging about them, whether it's a Serbian mail-order bride (now widow) showing a gruff sisterly concern for her younger colleague, a father yearning to re-connect with his daughter or the protagonist trying to live a life that is just a touch more responsible than the aimless one she's living here. The actors all do their jobs very well and the moody, slightly sordid texture of the film is a fair approximation of the small-town, off-the-main-road, atmosphere I know from some years in Upstate New York. So the film probably does what it is aiming for and is a worthwhile document of a certain slice of American life. But very little really happens and when it does it is, without being predictable exactly, not unexpected.
The Off Hours (2010)
A lonely diner on some trucker route in the middle of nowhere. And so the employees as well as the passers-by are lonely, too.
This is a sad movie, but beautiful and felt. It's about several characters–truckers with families somewhere, an older employee who sells her body for the sake of a child far away–but it centers around Francine (brilliantly played by Amy Seimitz). Francine is a young night employee, and since the place is often empty she spends time with the occasional customer. We feel a weariness and toughness in the face of some lonely guys, and some lonely locals. Eventually she has to make a big decision based mostly on externals–not that she wants to, but that she must.
All of this is filmed with a slightly romanticized grittiness. It's made gorgeous and intriguing and not unfriendly, so you wish you could be there. The people have no glam, but they're real, and their concerns for each other penetrate the gloom. All of this makes the movie excellent, and I'd recommend it totally.
But you might eventually ask what the point of these intersecting lives is. Do we simply wallow in a kind of lost world where people are only sometimes happy but whose larger lives are mostly doomed to repeating dismay? Maybe. It's satisfying as a downer movie, but it's also about resilience and love. That's one redeeming aspect to life, as a whole, even when it's awful–there are sparks of true compassion, little gestures, larger attempts at warmth and even self-sacrifice.
That's ultimately what you'll get here–some very good people with very troubled situations. It doesn't matter what they do wrong. It's what they manage to do right that makes you feel for them, especially for Francine, who is a hard, soft, bright, sad, brilliant young woman to believe in.