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Movies / On DVD / The Slaughter Rule
The Slaughter Rule

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The Slaughter Rule (2002)

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Reviews Counted:25

Fresh:17

Rotten:8

Average Rating:5.9/10

Runtime: 1 hr 56 mins

Genre: Dramas

Synopsis: Winter in Montana and everything breaks down. Just days after his estranged father dies, Roy Chutney gets cut from his high school football team. Football, for Roy, meant more than a proving... Winter in Montana and everything breaks down. Just days after his estranged father dies, Roy Chutney gets cut from his high school football team. Football, for Roy, meant more than a proving ground— it promised escape from his lonely rural existence and salvation from the passivity that dominates his life.

Joined by his best friend, Tracy Two Dogs, (a Blackfoot Indian with no small trouble of his own) Roy drowns his frustration in a mixture of tequila and self-pity. But in Blue Springs, Montana, alcohol begets violence, and the soon-reached limits of small-town Saturday night only add brutality to Roy's despair.

Enter Gideon Ferguson, a canny giant of a man who ekes out a life among barflies, hawking newspapers in the two a.m. nether world of closing time. Gid is seeking "gamers"—kids who scrap hard— to play on his Six-Man football squad, and he recruits Roy to be his quarterback.

Over the course of the season, Gid and Roy enter into a tenuous friendship. For Gid, the football team provides a sense of purpose in a life nearly bled dry. For Roy, the game is a pure response to life— if you break enough tackles and keep sprinting for open ground, you might outrun your inside trouble. It's as if they complete each other: Roy permits Gid a dimension of grace, a glimmer of innocence Gid has never known; Gid grants Roy a portal into adulthood.

Entering Gid's world, Roy becomes witness to a tender side of Gid, who constantly looks after his old pal Studebaker, a sad-luck drifter. More importantly for Roy, the honky-tonk nightlife introduces him to Skyla, a dark-eyed bartender several years Roy's senior. Their burgeoning romance and Roy’s growing friendship with Gid collide, complicating all of their lives.

The Slaughter Rule is a rough season in a young man's life, a season of exposure, prejudice, and ultimately - compassion. -- © Cowboy Pictures [More]

Starring: Ryan Gosling, David Morse, Clea DuVall, Kelly Lynch

Starring: Ryan Gosling, David Morse, Clea DuVall, Kelly Lynch, David Cale, Eddie Spears

Director: Alex Smith, Andrew Smith

Director: Alex Smith, Andrew Smith
Screenwriter: Andrew Smith, Alex Smith
Producer: Michael Robinson, Gregory O'Connor
Studio: Cowboy Pictures

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Reviews for The Slaughter Rule

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1 - 20 (sorted by critic A-Z; UK critics are listed first)
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A timid template of an indie movie that glides through all the proper turns, sticks up all the appropriate signposts, and never once takes a demanding or truthful step.

Full Review Source: Combustible Celluloid | comment Comment
02/07/03
Jeffrey M. Anderson
Jeffrey M. Anderson
Combustible Celluloid

There's no miraculous 'Renegades rally from thirty points down in the last two minutes to win' nonsense here.

Full Review Source: Film Threat | comment Comment
01/09/03
Merle Bertrand
Merle Bertrand
Film Threat

Unlike Terrence Malick, whose shadow looms over the film's visual style, the Smiths over-explain, not grasping that all those barren fields and blood-red clouds are doing plenty of work for them.

Full Review Source: Los Angeles Times | comment Comment
01/23/03
Manohla Dargis
Manohla Dargis
Los Angeles Times
Top Critic Icon Top Critic

Sex, alcohol, and the brutality of football. It may seem like a 'guy' movie, but the relationship struggles make this accessible to all audiences.

Full Review Source: TheMovieChicks.com | comment Comment
01/10/03
Cherryl Dawson and Leigh Ann Palone
Cherryl Dawson and Leigh Ann Palone
TheMovieChicks.com

None of the characters' troubled histories or transformations are as compelling as Gosling and Duvall's unforced emotional complexity would promise or merit.

Full Review Source: L.A. Weekly | comment Comment
01/23/03
Hazel-Dawn Dumpert
Hazel-Dawn Dumpert
L.A. Weekly

Morse, usually saddled with earnest supporting parts, is a revelation in the role, his boundless, good-natured energy camouflaging the contradictions roiling beneath the surface.

Full Review Source: Boxoffice Magazine | comment Comment
07/10/02
Annlee Ellingson
Annlee Ellingson
Boxoffice Magazine

The film's real strength lies in two excellent performances, from veteran Morse and up-and-comer Gosling.

Full Review Source: TV Guide's Movie Guide | comment Comment
01/12/03
Ken Fox
Ken Fox
TV Guide's Movie Guide

The movie has a richness that blows away most first features, not to mention most sports movies.

Full Review Source: Citysearch | comment Comment
01/16/03
Justin Hartung
Justin Hartung
Citysearch

A keen and compassionate drama.

Full Review Source: Los Angeles Daily News | comment Comment
01/24/03
Evan Henerson
Evan Henerson
Los Angeles Daily News

This promising but confused first film is best viewed as a touching portrait of thwarted, volatile male passion in a world where you could almost say that geography is destiny

Full Review Source: New York Times | comment Comment
07/10/02
Stephen Holden
Stephen Holden
New York Times
Top Critic Icon Top Critic

A coming-of-age tale that nicely exploits the ruggedness of rural Montana and the rough-hewn, often tenuous nature of male friendships in those parts.

Full Review Source: Hollywood Reporter | comment Comment
04/08/02
Kirk Honeycutt
Kirk Honeycutt
Hollywood Reporter
Top Critic Icon Top Critic

Writer-directors Andrew and Alex Smith go for emotional truth, but what they come up with is often silly.

Full Review Source: San Francisco Chronicle | comment Comment
02/07/03
Mick LaSalle
Mick LaSalle
San Francisco Chronicle

Beautiful in its stark way.

Full Review Source: ReelTalk Movie Reviews | comment Comment
01/12/03
Donald J. Levit
Donald J. Levit
ReelTalk Movie Reviews

The lead performances could hardly be better.

Full Review Source: Village Voice | comment Comment
01/07/03
Dennis Lim
Dennis Lim
Village Voice

First-time filmmakers Andrew and Alex Smith have a potentially intriguing and very different tale, but they consistently shoot themselves in the foot with their amateurishly self-conscious direction.

Full Review Source: Film Journal International | comment Comment
01/11/03
David Noh
David Noh
Film Journal International

Montana's wide-open spaces -- and the closed hearts of the people who live there -- make for a sincere, superbly acted story of loss and need.

Full Review Source: Netflix | comment Comment
02/11/03
James Rocchi
James Rocchi
Netflix

It has hints of greatness, but fails to completely realize them.

Full Review Source: EricDSnider.com | comment Comment
09/18/02
Eric D. Snider
Eric D. Snider
EricDSnider.com

Best movie I saw in 2002. Features a terrifyingly real performance by David Morse.

Full Review Source: Offoffoff | comment Comment
03/10/03
Joshua Tanzer
Joshua Tanzer
Offoffoff

Its focus on the complex relationship between an emotionally wounded youth and the sexually ambiguous older man who mentors him is a welcome detour from genre routine.

Full Review Source: New York Post | comment Comment
01/08/03
Megan Turner
Megan Turner
New York Post

Clear, cold and yet uniquely sensitive, The Slaughter Rule isn't a by-the-book flick, but that's what makes it so good.

Full Review Source: E! Online | comment Comment
01/24/03
E! Online
 
 
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