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The Motel Life

The Motel Life (2013)

November. 08,2013
|
5.9
|
R
| Drama Thriller Mystery

A pair of working-class brothers flee their Reno Motel after getting involved in a fatal hit-and-run accident.

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CommentsXp
2013/11/08

Best movie ever!

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Voxitype
2013/11/09

Good films always raise compelling questions, whether the format is fiction or documentary fact.

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Bumpy Chip
2013/11/10

It’s not bad or unwatchable but despite the amplitude of the spectacle, the end result is underwhelming.

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Raymond Sierra
2013/11/11

The film may be flawed, but its message is not.

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Michael Ledo
2013/11/12

Set in dreary Indie symbolic winter, "Motel Life" is a story of despair and unconditional love Frank (Emile Hirsch) has for his brother Jerry Lee (Stephen Dorff). After Jerry Lee accidentally kills a kid on a bicycle, Frank abets him in disposing of the evidence and moving on. The brothers and everyone they touch have lives of despair which are brightened by Frank's story telling.When the film wasn't slow and boring, it was filled with despair. It was certainly well acted and well scripted, for what it was. However on the entertainment scale, it was one I could have missed; a good movie I didn't like.The film won the audience award at the 2012 Rome Screen Fest as well as best screenplay among 17 films.Parental Guidance: F-bomb, sex, nudity- much of it was cartoon.

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Deanmullen2011
2013/11/13

The Polsky brothers did a great job at bringing to life this intimate tale of two brothers adapted from Willy Vlautin's 2007 novel. Sympathy for the brother characters is rightly earned by two great performances from Emile Hirsch and Stephen Dorff. Having seen Emile in "Into the Wild (2007)", I feel that this style of film definitely suits his own style of acting. Dakota Fanning also add's her own valuable performance to the film, as one of her many stepping stones from the childhood actress we all knew to a young woman with a successful career ahead in her adult years. An intriguing drama that brings with it a sense of being realistic while still at times, managing to pull off brief humor while at other times being emotional. It isn't perfect but it is undeniably a touching movie, by far one of the better films out there and probably a film not seen by enough people.

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Robert J. Maxwell
2013/11/14

It's hard to believe that Nevada -- desolate Nevada -- is one of the most urbanized states in the union. Aside from Las Vegas and Reno, there are the smaller towns of Elko, Sparks, and Winemucca. Nobody lives in between. Well, maybe tiny Tonopah where, one hundred years ago, I danced on the stage of the LDS church. In this case we're dealing with two brothers, Hirsch and the older Dorff, who are involved in a hit-and-run accident in wintry and rain-slick Reno. Dorff is full of chagrin. Distracted, he shoots himself in the leg, promptly amputated at the hospital. Hirsch tends to his brother quietly but lovingly.However, the cops are on their tails and Hirsch must hustle Dorff out of the hospital into an old beaten up car he's just bought by selling his Dad's priceless Winchester rifle, the one that's never been fired. I mention that rifle because it's a splendid-looking weapon, all engraved and glistening brass, kept in a velvet-lined case. And Hirsch sells it for four hundred dollars road money although the reluctant store owner advises him that he could get much more at a gun show or on the internet. These guys are down-and-outers. They have to scratch for every penny.Their few friends include a guy recently released from a mental hospital who acts odd and at times manic. Then there is Kris Kristofferson as the Jungian archetype, the wise old man. He's full of advice like, "Always think you're great, or if not great, at least good, and then you can have everything." Well, what the hell. It's not Deepak Chopra but you'd pay fifty dollars an hour to hear the same thing from a shrink.The pair make it in their old clunker to Elko, which is actually a scenic little town where only the people seem to mar the allure. Fortunately, one of the people is Dakota Fanning, now grown up, an old girl friend of one of the boys. She quite attractive too. She has very large blue eyes over which two very large lids droop. Her background is as hard scrabble as everyone else's, her mother a hooker.There are some moving scenes of Hirsch caring for his bed-ridden brother in an Elko motel. That stump causes his a great deal of discomfort. He needs to be helped, very awkwardly, in and out of the shower, and Hirsch must dress what's left of his leg. In the movies, that's usually good enough, but here, as in real life, the caring brother is no doctor and has no antibiotics and the leg becomes infected and Hirsch takes Dorff to a hospital where he dies.It's a gloomy picture. There's nothing funny about it. But the performances are uniformly good. Hirsch really has a passive role, but Dorff is convincing in showing us emotions like pain and fear. He looks a little like Dennis Quaid. And he comes across as a nice, affable kid who wishes no one any harm. The screenplay lets them down once in a while. In their last scene together, night time, in the kind of cheap motel room where you can still smell the disinfectant, Dorff tells Hirsch, "You're a good guy and I love you." We already know it.There's something else I didn't quite get. Dorff draws a lot of picture in comic book style. And Hirsch tells him fantastic stories about BJs and cross-dressing pirate captains and desert islands. They take up quite a bit of screen time and they're illustrated in the style of an animated graphic novel. I don't get it.Dakota Fanning isn't given much to do except blink once in a while, which practically sets the air around her in motion. Let's have no more girls named Dakota. I see that name everywhere these days. Kristofferson is appealing as the car salesman who dispenses stale recommendations. Thirty years ago, it would have been Ben Johnson, the actor, not the playwright.One thing that keeps the film worthy of watching is the use of settings -- landscapes, weather, indoor locations. It's something that isn't often given much attention, yet has a great impact on our response to the story. And I don't mean just majestic mountains or grimy city streets, but something more personal and subtle. "Fargo" was another instance, as were "The Hustler", and "Desert Hearts" (Reno again), and "Atlantic City." The story isn't exactly gripping but the performances and the bits of interaction are so well displayed that you'll probably stay interested.

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Armand
2013/11/15

snow. animation. common acting. dark story. a mixture between Of mice and men , blue song and usual scenes from a gloomy America. it is not great or good or impressive. only decent. each actor does a good work and the presence of Krist Kristoffen remains the profound note of movie. a film like an old Dodge Dart. too common for many, not brilliant for the others. but interesting and almost touching. an adaptation. a testimony. realistic and full of ash taste. a film who can remember few basic things of ordinary life or be boring. but not bad. sure, it is not a revelation, Emile Hirsch and Stephen Dorff makes theirs character in well known manner but that is one of film virtues.

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