Joe the King
A Phoenix pick
A young kid grows up in a tough blue-collar '70s town at odds with his bruising
dad. It sounds familiar, but though a beer-gutted Val Kilmer takes on the
pot-bellied Alec Baldwin role as the raffish father, actor Frank Whaley's debut
is a long way from the Farrelly brothers' Outside Providence. Devoid of
humor and sentiment, relentless and conventional, it's a tale of numbing
injustice and suffering that finally finds its heart when it's almost too
late.
The 400 blows fall fast and furiously on 14-year-old Joe (Noah Fleiss) from
Whaley's high-profile cast of characters. Humiliated by a teacher (Camryn
Manheim) in class, misled by the ex-con (John Leguizamo) at the bar where he
works, ignored by his guidance councilor (Ethan Hawke), Joe falls into a life
of crime only after his drunken father smashes the Johnny Ray record collection
of his mother (Karen Young). Stressful and stark, Joe the King evokes a
teenage wasteland without relief, redemption, or much point. Screens
at the Copley Place Saturday, September 18 at 7:30 and 10 p.m. and Sunday, September 19 at 2:15 and 4:45
p.m. Director Frank Whaley will be present at tonight's 7:30 showing.
Film Festival Feature Films
|
Keepers of the Frame |
The Runner |
The Carriers Are Waiting |
Tumbleweeds |
Deterrance |
The War Zone |
Happy, Texas |
Joe the King |
The Legend of 1900 |
Best Laid Plans |
Original Diner Guys |
The Glass Jar |
Rose's |
Wirey Spindell |
Starry Night |
Bellyfruit |
More Boston Film Festival information, film descriptions, and show times
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