Nebraska
Nebraska

Nebraska (2013)

7.5 ? Sep 21, 2013 1h 55m

Overview

An aging, booze-addled father takes a trip from Montana to Nebraska with his estranged son in order to claim what he believes to be a million-dollar sweepstakes prize.

Genres

Drama Adventure

Release Date

September 21, 2013

Rating

7.5 /10

Runtime

1h 55m

Official Trailer from YouTube

Bruce Dern

Bruce Dern

Woody Grant

Will Forte

Will Forte

David Grant

June Squibb

June Squibb

Kate Grant

Bob Odenkirk

Bob Odenkirk

Ross Grant

Stacy Keach

Stacy Keach

Ed Pegram

Mary Louise Wilson

Mary Louise Wilson

Aunt Martha

Rance Howard

Rance Howard

Uncle Ray

Tim Driscoll

Tim Driscoll

Bart

Devin Ratray

Devin Ratray

Cole

Angela McEwan

Angela McEwan

Peg Nagy

Glendora Stitt

Aunt Betty

Elizabeth Moore

Aunt Flo

Kevin Kunkel

Cousin Randy

Dennis McCoig

Uncle Verne

Ronald Vosta

Uncle Albert

Missy Doty

Missy Doty

Noel

John Reynolds

Bernie Bowen

Jeffrey Yosten

ER Doctor

Neal Freudenberg

George Westendorf

Eula Freudenberg

Jean Westendorf

T

tmdb39513728

Feb 04, 2015

**Payne Relief** The black and white photography is a nice touch. It gives a kind of Karsh look to the weathered faces of the aging, reflective, yet still yearning cast of characters, and suits the rapidly fading memories of a bygone era in recent American history. The acting was pretty good. Bruce Dern gives an effortless performance as a cranky old coot with one attention-seeking foot in the spotlight and the other half-buried in the shadows of utter dementia. The interpersonal conflicts among family and community, past and present are presented in a simple, linear uncomplicated way. The story seems to want to explore the sad truths of a regressive, bankrupt nation and the ridiculous dreams and delusions people cling to. Life is limited and unfinished. Like the heads carved out of Mount Rushmore. Like the forlorn characters wandering on and off the screen. For even after a lifetime of honest hard work aligned with various fixed Christian principles, a restless, quiet desperation lingers. Lies and illusions are necessary to prevent a lonely, inconsolable reality from setting in. And while Alexander Payne manages to keeps things relatively upbeat to prevent dragging us down into a pit of futile despair, he also fails to fully develop and realize the themes he puts forward. Every time Payne rustles up a movie (Sideways, The Descendants) he gets high praise, and this time he almost deserves it. He's a fairly astute cinematician who wants to make meaningful pictures without getting in too deep. Specifically, road movies on half a tank. Thankfully, he doesn't tread into murky Bergman territory, or puff his stuff up with Goddard-like self-importance, but he doesn't do himself much justice by avoiding or brushing off the potential worth and urgency of the matters he introduces. His concepts are cut short. While I'm watching Nebraska, I can't help but wonder how adept filmmakers like Kieslowski or Cassavettes would have treated and serviced the material. What's almost more disappointing than getting old, losing a presence of mind and attempting to reconcile broken memories, is not being able to fully grasp, much less handle and nurture, your own brainchild.

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