The Slaughter Rule
January. 11,2002A young man finds solace with a young woman, his mother, and a high-school football coach who recruits him to quarterback a six-man team.
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Reviews
I love this movie so much
Wonderful character development!
To me, this movie is perfection.
It is neither dumb nor smart enough to be fun, and spends way too much time with its boring human characters.
It must have been a bad night to try and watch this movie.Very different than I expected to say the least. My question doesn't have to go along with the main story but what was up with the mom? What was going on when Roy walked in her room and she was crying on the bed naked? Just ended with no endings for me which I find disturbing. Did I miss something with Skyla and Roy, were they to keep in touch or did she just leave. What happened with the Christmas trees and the step dad? Did two dogs end up leaving home for good? I have really enjoyed watching Ryan Goslin in movies thats why I chose this one tonight. I expected an action football movie and although not disappointed in the movie inself, just ended up confused. Any one else confused too?
Growing up in Texas and traveling to Texas towns to show horses as a youth, something about the feel of this movie felt very familiar. I thought the interaction of the people was very real. Movies in rural settings that focus on people's relationships have such a pure,albeit lonely feel. The lesson that apart from violence, people's differences won't hurt us or rub off on us and we can be friends and supportive of all different kinds of people. AND the soundtrack is my favorite album in all the world. What a bonus. I had never even heard of many of these musicians before and they are so good. Another movie I saw recently with a similar feel was Hi-lo Country. And this movie even had an appearance by Don Walser, another fabulous, although little known musician.
This is a prime example of a flick that breaks all the rules and is still damn good. You always hear filmmakers blather on about how they work their own way, and then you see their junk and think that maybe they should have read a book. This is not one of those times. it's an intense look into sports and rural life and how they interplay with one another in the Midwest. I was drawn to it by the title, and although it is about football, i could totally relate because when i played Youth baseball, I was on a team so bad one year that literally half of our games were called off early.Not that this has to do totally with sports, it is more about male relationships, as Roy, the lead character deals with the death of his father through his participation in six-man football. As the story unfolds, he is cut from his own team and hooks up with a new team coached by a strange outsider played by David Morse. he starts off just being intense, but then becomes creepy (there is a homoerotic undertone between coach and player). Ryan Gosling, who plays Roy is solid and Morse is terrific. This ain't "Remember The Titans" but still very much worth checking out. It got good press at this past year's Sundance Film Festival.
I thought this was a great movie. The script and the cast are very strong. I personally think a sign of a good movie is that it takes me somewhere I've never been, shows me characters I've never seen before, in situations I don't ever expect to be in, and lets me totally understand what they are experiencing. Regarding the comment from RitchCS in Ft. Lauderdale that the film is only showing on the Sundance Channel, it is playing this week in Chicago at Facets Multimedia so it may in other "art house" theaters around the country. Catch it if you can!