Why Watch That

Top Menu

  • About
  • About
  • Advertise with Us
  • Checkout
    • Purchase Confirmation
    • Purchase History
    • Transaction Failed
  • Checkout
    • Purchase Confirmation
    • Purchase History
    • Transaction Failed
  • Co-Hosts
  • Co-Hosts 1
  • Contact
  • Content Search Int
  • Critic’s Thoughts
  • Enter for a chance to win OVERLORD on Blu-ray & 4K Ultra HD
  • Enter for a chance to win WHAT MEN WANT on Blu-ray
  • Enter for a chance to win a Pet Sematary on 4K
  • Enter for a chance to win a Pet Sematary on 4K
  • Enter for a chance to win A QUIET PLACE on Blu-ray
  • Enter for a chance to win a Remastered 25th Anniversary copy of FORREST GUMP on Blu-ray
  • Enter for a chance to win ACTION POINT on Blu-Ray/DVD
  • Enter for a chance to win BOOK CLUB on Blu-Ray/DVD
  • Enter for a chance to win Braveheart & Gladiator on Blu Ray
  • Enter for a chance to win Daddy’s Home 2 on Blu-ray
  • Enter for a chance to win FATHER’S DAY PRIZE PACK on Blu-ray and DVD
  • Enter for a chance to win Fences on Blu-ray
  • Enter for a Chance to Win Ghost in the Shell on Blu Ray
  • Enter for a Chance to Win Inside Amy Schumer: Season 4 on Blu Ray
  • Enter for a Chance to Win Juice on Blu Ray
  • Enter for a chance to win MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE 1-5 on 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray
  • Enter for a chance to win Office Christmas Party on Blu-ray
  • Enter for a chance to win Same Kind of Different as Me on Blu-ray
  • Enter for a Chance to Win Saturday Night Fever on Blu Ray
  • Enter for a chance to win season 2 of The Shannara Chronicles on Blu Ray
  • Enter for a chance to win SEASON ONE OF JACK RYAN on Blu-ray and DVD
  • Enter for a chance to win Silence on Blu-ray
  • Enter for a Chance to Win South Park 20th Season on Blu Ray
  • Enter for a chance to win South Park Season 1-5 on Blu-ray
  • Enter for a chance to win Suburbicon on Blu-ray
  • Enter for a Chance to Win The Godfather & The Godfather: Part II on Blu Ray
  • Enter for a chance to win THE JACK RYAN COLLECTION on 4K Ultra HD/Blu-ray
  • Enter for a chance to win TRANSFORMERS on Blu-ray
  • Enter for a Chance to Win Workaholics Complete Series on DVD
  • Events
  • First Annual Why Watch That Awards Voting
  • Giveaways
  • Guest Hosts
  • Home
  • homefortheholidays
  • Homepage
  • Homepage New
  • Interviews
  • Jobs
  • Love What You Watch Kit
  • Podcasts
  • Press
  • Privacy Policy
  • Radio
  • Referee Recommends
  • Resources
  • Reviews
  • Reviews in a Snap
  • Sample Page
  • Shop WWT
  • Support
  • Terms and Conditions
  • The Team
  • The Why Watch That TV Tracker
  • TV Reviews
  • Win a FATHER’S DAY GIFT giveaway
  • Written Reviews

Main Menu

  • Latest
  • Reviews
    • Video
    • Audio
    • Written
    • Festivals

logo

Why Watch That

  • Latest
  • Reviews
    • Video
    • Audio
    • Written
    • Festivals
  • Why Watch That Conclusion and Thank You

  • Is The Gentlemen an Amazing Example of Harnessed Excess?

  • Will Constellation Shock You Into a New Reality?

  • Will The New Look Rise out of the Ashes of War?

  • Is The Taste of Things a Recipe for Quiet Magic?

  • Can Mads Mikkelsen Fight His Way to The Promised Land?

  • Is All Creatures Great and Small the Perfect Uplifting Escape?

  • Is The Brothers Sun a Thrilling Way to Start the Year?

Home›Movie and TV Reviews›Boyhood

Boyhood

By WWTR
September 12, 2014
1139
0
Share:
One Man's Sloppiness Is Another Man's Authenticity
Category
Movie
Cast

Patricia Arquette
Ellar Coltrane
Lorelei Linklater
Ethan Hawke

Writers

Richard Linklater

Director
Richard Linklater
Information

165 mins.
Drama
August 15, 2014

Rated R for language including sexual references, and for teen drug and alcohol use. (MPAA)

REVIEW

Writer-director Richard Linklater’s “Boyhood” may have predisposed certain viewers to like or even love it because of its 12-year span of filming. As the film progresses, it builds because of the passage of time. We get information in the way that Ellar Coltrane’s Mason Evans, Jr. (the boy referenced in the title) would. He’s either present in the scene or the scene contains information that he would’ve been able to pickup somehow. There are snippets of information that mean a lot, but a child wouldn’t necessarily be able to interpret them fully; the child would know that something’s up, though. This film’s closer to a collection of memories in that way. It’s like flipping through a family photo album and being reminded of how you felt during the time when the photos were taken.

While Linklater doesn’t tell you what year it is, you can tell, especially by paying attention to how the kids look, how they sound (Mason Jr.’s voice change, for example), and what they play with, talk about, etc. (“Harry Potter” books, the Wii, Obama/Biden signs, “Twilight” books, and so on). Mason Jr.’s age is referenced here and there, as well. It’s like when you look up to find that a few years have passed and that things have changed somehow. At its end, one of the characters states that, instead of seizing the moment, the moment really seizes you. That’s nicely put and appropriate.

In regards to the acting, “Boyhood” features the improv style that Linklater likes best. The best example of that style is Marco Perella’s Bill Welbrock, the second husband of Patricia Arquette’s Olivia Evans. Perella nails it; he knows how to improv without ever seeming to be doing so. The rest of the actors are good at it, though not as good. I can see them thinking of what to say next, at times.

In comparison to Linklater’s “Before” films (“Before Sunrise,” “Before Sunset,” and “Before Midnight”), which also star Ethan Hawke, I like “Boyhood” better. I still think that Linklater needs much sharper editing, though. Some scenes just don’t mean as much as others; they don’t contribute much to the furthering of the story, and a few of them last a bit too long.

If “Boyhood” were half as long, then it would’ve had a better chance at taking my breath away. As it is, it’s good and certainly interesting. I just wish that Linklater would stop meandering. Many praise him for that, claiming that it gives his films the ring of authenticity. I just see it as a bit sloppy.

 

Verdict: Good


About: (Source: boyhood)

Filmed over 12 years with the same cast, Richard Linklater’s BOYHOOD is a groundbreaking story of growing up as seen through the eyes of a child named Mason (a breakthrough performance by Ellar Coltrane), who literally grows up on screen before our eyes. Starring Ethan Hawke and Patricia Arquette as Mason’s parents and newcomer Lorelei Linklater as his sister Samantha, BOYHOOD charts the rocky terrain of childhood like no other film has before. Snapshots of adolescence from road trips and family dinners to birthdays and graduations and all the moments in between become transcendent, set to a soundtrack spanning the years from Coldplay’s Yellow to Arcade Fire’s Deep Blue. BOYHOOD is both a nostalgic time capsule of the recent past and an ode to growing up and parenting. It’s impossible to watch Mason and his family without thinking about our own journey.

 

Previous Article

Boardwalk Empire

Next Article

Z Nation

0
Shares
  • 0
  • +
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Related articles More from author

  • SXSW 2021

    SXSW 2021 – Why Watch That’s First Reaction to Here Before

  • EpisodeReviews

    Netflix First Looks: Malcolm & Marie and The Dig

  • Reviews

    Sneak Peek: Colette

  • About
  • Advertise with Us
  • Jobs
  • Support
  • The Team
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Contact
Why Watch That 2023