The comic book-inspired poster for Peter Care's The Dangerous Lives of Altar Boys |
QUICK REVIEW:
We are in a Catholic school in the American South in the 1970s, where 4 boys are drawing superheroes and pulling pranks like stealing the saint statue from the school. One of them now gets a girlfriend, and lots of tensions arise.
Altar Boys thrives on its dream cast: Kieran Culkin (Igby Goes Down (2002)), Emile Hirsch (The Mudge Boy (2003)), Jena Malone (Donnie Darko (2001)), Vincent D'Onofrio (Jurassic World (2015)) and Jodie Foster (The Silence of the Lambs (1991)), who was also a co-producer on the film. They are all absolutely wonderful in this coming-of-age youth drama.
It is filmed with nice, rich colors by Lance Acord (Being John Malkovich (1999)) and interlaced with super-cool animated sequences that detail the boys' comic book fantasies and their conceptions of themselves.
The Dangerous Lives of Altar Boys is an adaptation of the semi-autobiographical 1994 novel by Chris Fuhrman, written by Jeff Stockwell (Children of the Machine (2015-)) and Michael Petroni (The Book Thief (2013)) and directed by music video director Peter Care (Six Feet Under (2004), TV-series) as his feature debut. The film has a surprising ending, which I liked.
This is a good film.
Watch the trailer for the film - with Spanish subtitles - here
Cost: 12 mil. $
Box office: 2 mil. $
= Mega-flop
[This considerably budgeted debut independent film received mostly good reviews, but failed to attract the audiences it needed: It never even crossed 100 screens in North America, where it grossed 1.7 mil. $ (85 % of the total gross), and internationally, it seems it was only released to Italy, Spain and Mexico, - perhaps because these are big Catholic markets, - but it never did much business there either. The film did win the Best First Feature award at the Independent Spirit Awards, but Care hasn't come back since this major flop.]
What do you think of The Dangerous Lives of Altar Boys?
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