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Half Nelson (2006)
 
© Axiom Films (2007)
SFC Readers' Opinions:
(1)
(0)
(0)
SFC Reviewer's Opinion:
Limited Recommendation

Genre
Drama
   
Synopsis

Dan Dunne (Ryan Gosling) is a young inner-city junior high school teacher whose ideals wither and die in the face of reality. Day after day in his shabby Brooklyn classroom, he somehow finds the energy to inspire his 13 and 14-year-olds to examine everything from civil rights to the Civil War with a new enthusiasm. Rejecting the standard curriculum in favour of an edgier approach, Dan teaches his students how change works - on both a historical and personal scale - and how to think for themselves. Though Dan is brilliant, dynamic, and in control in the classroom, he spends his time outside school on the edge of consciousness. His disappointments and disillusionment have led to a serious drug habit. He juggles his hangovers and his homework, keeping his lives separated, until one of his troubled students, Drey (Shareeka Epps), catches him getting high after school. From this awkward beginning, Dan and Drey stumble into an unexpected friendship. Despite the differences in their ages and situations, they are both at an important intersection. Depending on which way they turn - and which choices they make - their lives will change.

   
Directed by  
Ryan Fleck
   
Written by  
Ryan Fleck (written by); Anna Boden (written by).
   
Starring  
Ryan Gosling (Dan Dunne); Jeff Lima (Roodly); Shareeka Epps (Drey); Nathan Corbett (Terrance); Tyra Kwao-Vovo (Stacy); Rosemary Ledee (Gina); Tristan Wilds (Jamal); Bryce Silver (Bernard); Kaela C. Pabon (Lena); Erica Rivera (Erika (as Erika Rivera)); Stephanie Bast (Vanessa); Eleanor Hutchins (Simone); Sebastian Sozzi (Javier); Tina Holmes (Rachel); Karen Chilton (Karen). Please contact SFC to add other cast members and characters.
 

Length (mins):
106
Ratings:
R (15)
Language:
ENG

Big 5 Oscar Wins:
0
Big 5 Oscar Noms:
1
IMDB page:
Link

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Important: the following essays and comments are authored by Soul Food Cinema readers. Whilst the Editor prays for the spiritual integrity of all content of this site, it should be noted that these represent personal opinions and carry no official endorsement. If you consider any content to be a misrepresentation of Catholic teaching, please contact SFC. May God bless you and enlighten you in your reading.
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Articles, Essays and Reviews
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Please contact SFC if you are interested in submitting an essay on this film.
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Readers' Comments and Opinions
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Click the link to comment on this film. You may like to copy the film title and year (as given above) to your clipboard now for pasting into the following form.
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  Real acting minus the real facts  
  Mark Banks (United Kingdom)  
  Opinion: Limited Recommendation  
Half Nelson is one of many films that have come along in the past decade that have managed to tap into the melancholic, ambivalent mood which so many people lead their lives by, but which at the same time have failed to offer any real solutions to escape from that mood and attitude to life. The biggest issue I take with this film is that whilst the performances are commendable, particularly that of the young Shareeka Epps as Drey, the overall message that one could so easily take from this film is that the most likely thing to happen from getting addicted to drugs is a case of mild to moderate depression. Understandable given the location of this film, is the failure to address the horrors of drug production, dealing and smuggling in the likes of Columbia and elsewhere in South America. But less understanding is the failure to really address issues such as murder, crime, suicide, prostitution and family breakdown that certainly are present in Brooklyn. That said, there may be some people that watch this film and connect with it on some level; at least taking the message that drugs are not a good thing and do not bring happiness. Overall, I thought it was too relaxed in its treatment of the subject matter though.
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  Fresh, great dialogue and contains some perceptive observations.  
  Greg Watts (United Kingdom)  
  Opinion: Recommended  
This is a film that captures the contradictions that many of us have in our lives, the gap between the person we are and the person we want to be. Dan Dunne (Ryan Gosling) is a good teacher, someone who wants to change the world and inspire others to do the same. Yet he seems powerless to change his own chaotic lifestyle away from the classroom. One day, one of his pupils, thirteen-year-old Drey (the outstanding Shareeka Epps), unexpectedly encounters him taking drugs. And so begins an unusual and complex friendship between the two of them. What could easily have been a bleak film is instead one that is compassionate and has moments of light. Maybe it's not as good as Freedom Writers, but it's fresh, has great dialogue and contains some perceptive observations.

 

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Soul Food Cinema - Movie/Film Reviews and Discussion from the World's Catholic-Christian Community
Images in the header are from: Antwone Fisher (© Fox Searchlight, 2002); Stand by Me (© Columbia Pictures, 1986); Jesus of Nazareth (© ITV (1977); The Passion of The Christ (© Newmarket Films, 2004); Rabbit-proof Fence (© Buena Vista, 2002); Amazing Grace (© Bristol Bay Productions, 2006) and Il Postino (© Cecchi Gori Group, 1994).