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Joe the King

Joe the King

List Price: $9.98
Your Price: $9.98
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Awesome movie with breakthrough performance!
Review: Remember this name: Noah Fleiss. This young kid gives such a mesmerizing, true-to-life performance you almost forget you're watching a movie and become totally engrossed in the life of this kid, who is at the center of this movie. This kid lives the most dismal, sad life and does not complain once to anyone. He just tries to live day by day and get through his meager existence by claiming little "victories" where he can. You just can't help but really feel for this kid down to the core of your being. A must see! Good performances from the supporting cast round out the movie as well.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Awesome movie with breakthrough performance!
Review: Remember this name: Noah Fleiss. This young kid gives such a mesmerizing, true-to-life performance you almost forget you're watching a movie and become totally engrossed in the life of this kid, who is at the center of this movie. This kid lives the most dismal, sad life and does not complain once to anyone. He just tries to live day by day and get through his meager existence by claiming little "victories" where he can. You just can't help but really feel for this kid down to the core of your being. A must see! Good performances from the supporting cast round out the movie as well.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Haunting and Beautiful
Review: This has got to be one of the great underrated indie movies of 1999, but then Whaley has always been one of the great underrated actors, one of those actors who disappears so completely in a role he doesn't get the same name recognition as the showboats.

The spare, powerful screenplay is shot with a powerful visual sense -- note the schoolyard and classroom scenes are exactly child eye-level, as opposed to most childhood memory scenes, shot downward from an adult eye-level. Even the light and texture evoke childhood. The details speak volumes. Little moments -- the tampon, the girl at the roller rink -- resonate, and the big moments are controlled and done without self-pity or melodrama. The performances director Whaley got from the actors are fantastic. Stars disappear into their roles. The children... the boys who plays Joe, his brother, and the friend (Ray?) show not a sign of self-consciousness. Their dialogue rings so true. This is a surprising and wonderful movie that came out in a year when everyone was asking "what's going on with boys?" This movie says a lot about boys without the heavy-handed style of Hollywood. Odd that none of the reviewers have picked up on that. Unbelievable that this movie was shot in under a month. Director is one to watch.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: King of the Hill
Review: This interesting independent movie directed by Frank Whalley is a worthwile and engaging coming of age story about Joe, a teenage boy (played by the unknown and excellent Noah Fleiss), who doesn`t seem to find his place in school, neighborhood and family. It doesn`t help that he has an abusive drunk father and a mother too busy to care, who let him constantly on his own and forcing him to make some (bad) choices.
This could have turned into a predictable, by-the-numbers tearjerker but thankfully the director tries to develop a deep and dry story, realistic and honest enough. The last scenes with Joe and his father are actually quite well-done, never becoming too sappy although they make for some moving and powerful moments.
Not a stellar picture, but it`s done with care and talent in all levels, turning it into an above average effort and a good directing debut for Whalley. There`s even some acting contributions by indie-stars like Ethan Hawke, John Leguizamo or Val Kilmer in supporting roles. Recommended.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Superbly Done
Review: This is a sad, sad, story. It is about a boy, who at 14, his life is already shown to go nowhere. The irony in the movie is that no one can save him, no matter how much they try. It seems his fate is all ready decided. The boy makes a few bad decisions and it seems to show that he'll stay on that same path forever. Whaley does a wonderful job with this movie. It's not a story about the kid(Joe) but a story of many real-life children in the same situation. We see the story through the eyes of Joe(played very well by Noah Fleiss)as he navigatesthrough every day life. The boy has no role model, and his family is the one to blame. His constantly drunk and abusive father(Val Kilmer in perhaps his most touching role ever)offers no support. Neither does his mother, who seems to be in a never-ending state of shock. And then there's his older brother, who constantly ditches him. We have sympathy for Joe because he's not a bad kid, he's just doing bad things.Others try to influence him such as a school counseler(Ethan Hawke), and fellow worker (John Leguizamo), but to no avail. Joe seems to be beyond help. Joe is eventually caught after stealing some money. The sad part is he stole the money to pay off one of his father's loans, and buy his mother new records. (The previous records were brokenbecause of his fathers rage.) The final scene between boy and father is one of the most moving I've seen in awhile.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A sad, bitter dose of reality.
Review: This is a vulgar, profane, painful movie about a vulgar, profane, and painful young life that, at 14, appears already to be wasted. The boy, "Joe the King," never had a chance. In the most dysfunctional of homes, where he is cursed by both slovenly mother and drunken father, in a school where he suffers severe emotional abuse (not to mention a pants-down whipping in front of the class) at the hands of a fat, ugly teacher, and onto the streets, where alienation and theft become a way of life: that is young Joe's milieu. And friends, it isn't pretty. Neither is the movie. Poignant? Yes, absolutely. But pretty? No chance. And that is exactly the hand that fate has dealt to young Joseph: no chance.

The cinematic beauty of Joe the King-easily the most moving motion picture that I have seen in many years-is the dose of gut-wrenching reality that it dishes up . . . and keeps dishing all the way to the end. And then some. Because it doesn't just go away after the credits. It stays there in your conscience to haunt you. There is no saving grace in store for that boy. No one steps forward to save him from the sordid future that appears to be in store for him. No redemption. No touch by an angel to rescue this soon-to-be-lost soul. His no-good father (well-played by Val Kilmer) is moved almost to tears, but too late . . . way too late.

You like irony? Joe ends up before a juvenile judge after being caught for burglary and theft. And what has he done with the ill-gotten gains? He paid off a pressing debt for his father, and replaced his mother's precious record collection destroyed by his father in a drunken rage. Admirably, the movie-makers don't hit you over the head or moralize about any of that, they merely show it, period.

I shall not soon forget the bitter final scene as Joe is led down the long, long hallway to begin serving the kid's-prison sentence handed down by the judge. The boy stops, turns and stares you straight in the eye. Then in heart-rending closeup he continues the wordless stare. At you. At me. At all of us who failed him.

And it hurts. It truly hurts.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Great Movie and DVD
Review: This movie is a great independent feature. The cast is outstanding, including the young star. The movie follows a young boy through an abusive father and tough neighboorhood. The DVD contains a insightfull commentary on getting the movie made and also good independent tips. It also analyzes what I consider the best scene in the movie.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: joe the king is great
Review: this movie is well done,the young actors make it good.val kilmer is great as the father but i think i like the sons the best.joe will do what ever it takes to help out his family and so does his brother,they dont have what other kids have but they still live the best they can.the director deserves alot of credit for taking chances,and going against the norm and showing the boys the way BOYS are.i am talking about the underwear scenes,no stupid boxers, but boys in what other directors are afraid to show BRIEFS.it was a good story and i highly recommed this movie

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: joe the man
Review: this movie was wonderful, NOAH FLEISS ,whom i never heard of before, was perfectly cast in this film about a boy who has nothing but himself. well thats not entirely accurate, he lives with his mom,dad and older brother, but no-one realy knows he is there. the family has nothing, Joe's father (val kilmer) is an abusive drunk who used to be the school janitor, and Joe was embarased by his job, his mom is to busy to even care about Joe, and his older brother just doesnt want him hanging around him. so what is a guy to do, in this case Joe desides that stealing is his answer, he is not a bad kid, he just does bad things and has no role model to keep him straight.
this was actor Frank Whalley's directorial debut, which he also wrote. supposed to be semi auto-biographical.
i was so impressed with this movie that i went out and bought it. and i want to find out all i can about Noah Fleiss (a definite star of the future) who plays the part perfectly.
the critics didn't like the movie too well, but it did win awards at the sundance film festival, so it cant be that bad.
near the end of the film, something happens that makes you stop and pay attention, and look at your own life, because sometimes you only get one chance.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Reclaiming Youth
Review: This video presents the viewer with the life of too many kids in America today. Joe has many barriers and he copes as well as he can as a child. Although the adults in his life fail to support and nourish his spirit, Joe's sterling charcter and creativity are clear throughout the story. As a vice president of Reclaiming Youth International, I can say that Joe is one my favorite kids since he is so creative and energetic as a kid.


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