screen |skr_n| |skrin| |skri_n| noun • a blank, typically white or silver surface on which a photographic image is projected : the world's largest movie screen • movies or television; the motion-picture industry : she's a star of the stage as well as the screen. verb [ trans. ] • protect (someone) from something dangerous or unpleasant • evaluate or analyze (something) for its suitability for a particular purpose or application
Saturday, April 16, 2016
Everybody Wants Some!!
It’s classic Rick Linklater. Like Dazed and Confused, Before
Sunrise, Suburbia, and Boyhood before it, it’s a movie driven by characters and
theme, but the plot is a little fluid. Strong themes exploring the nature of
young men forming a team, bonding, trying to fit in, and trying to get laid
proliferate. And at the end of the movie, after the college baseball teammates
have been to a disco, a country bar, and a punk bar trying to meet women, you
kind of get it: It’s all an essay about having a posse, a tribe. Like other
Linklater movies, there are a couple of young actors who turn in classic, star-making
performances here: (think Ethan Hawke, Matthew McConaughey): remember the names
Juston Street and Glenn Powell. But everybody in the ensemble cast is solid. Linklater seems to be determined to prove that
you don’t need a strong plot to invoke strong feelings.
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