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Station to Station 2022 123movies

Station to Station 2022 123movies

How far do you go to get away from yourself?Jan. 07, 2022128 Min.
Your rating: 0
9 1 vote

Synopsis

Watch: Station to Station 2021 123movies, Full Movie Online – Matters of identity, personal expression, and belonging were never simple for Tom Ryan, the boundary-pushing, David Bowie-obsessed son of a housekeeper in New York’s tony Hamptons. But when the revelation of a long-held secret shatters his sense of self, Tom flees to the electric anonymity of Las Vegas to forget. There, an intriguing stranger offers him the ultimate opportunity for distraction, and Tom is launched headfirst into a 20-something’s playground: a charged, stimulating world of indulgence, adulation, and exhibition, while making unexpected connections with a new “found” family of choice. But when Tom’s new world starts to come apart from within (in a harrowing series of third-act events, each with Tom at the center) he soon learns how the things we leave unresolved in life find ways to force their own resolution. STATION TO STATION is the debut film from Asian- and African-American writer-director Benjamin Bryant. Set in a uniquely 21st-century environment, the film explores our rapidly evolving perceptions and conventions of family, friendship, gender roles, sexuality, and self-determination–probing, and often challenging, the assumptions and judgments we (both the characters and the audience) make about ourselves and each other..
Plot: With his life back East upended, a young man escapes to the electric anonymity of Las Vegas. When an intriguing offer puts him on an unexpected path, he learns how easily things left unresolved find a way of forcing their own resolution.
Smart Tags: #frontal_nudity #male_frontal_nudity #las_vegas_nevada #nevada #psychological_drama #runaway #nudity #first_time_director #debut_film #film_debut #writer_director #black_director #asian_director #black_writer #asian_writer #finding_a_purpose_in_life #diverse_cast_and_crew #asian_american #porn_industry #search_for_meaning #lgbt_interest


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Ratings:

8.0/10 Votes: 55
N/A | RottenTomatoes
N/A | MetaCritic
N/A Votes: 0 Popularity: 0.6 | TMDB

Reviews:

Not what you think it is, but something much better
I am not sure what I expected going into the movie (I was asked to be a test audience member two months ago) but it wasn’t what I thought, in all really good ways. It’s really hard to describe this movie without either giving too much away or giving people the wrong impression, so I think I’ll just say it’s a really well-done drama about a young man who has a lot of growing up to do, and a bit of a chip on his shoulder, who runs to Las Vegas rather than face his issues at home, only to find and create new issues there.

The film kind of follows him for 6-9 months as he interacts with friends/lovers/colleagues/family, and while he learn a lot about them, the audience learns a lot about him (and wonders if he’s actually learning, too). In that way, the film is a lot like Richard Linklater’s Beyond trilogy, and I think some reviewers have said that. But I think the other comparison they make, to Paul Thomas Anderson, is better.

Mostly because of the way the film makes all the psychological drama really watchable instead of depressing or boring. The two hours mostly flies by and it does a neat trick because by the end, you realize you had no idea where the movie was going, pretty much at any time, let alone somewhere so powerfully dramatic. I think that made it really satisfying to me. I am glad I didn’t assume the end in the first half because the setup was for something else.

I think there will be lots of comparisons to Boogie Nights, but I think that’s mostly due to surface similarities. Boogie Nights was bigger, more salcious for show, and wrapped up in a really predictable and old-fashioned way. This does a bunch of stuff I wasn’t expecting and treats its characters as unique, not tropes and that’s a movie lovers dream, in a way.

In a different review, for a different film, I said you could just watch the acting only and still be ertained, because all the leads were so good. That is 100% true here. The casting on this film, especially for all the main characters or the ones with big moments is incredible. I wouldn’t be surprised if any of these new faces break out, but I hope if they do, they don’t lose the raw parts of their performances in this film.

I don’t usually give 10s, so I gave the film a 9, mostly because it’s amazing they made this to this level of quality, on both a limited budget and during the pandemic. Without those challenges, it’s obvious this would have been a 10, and that’s a pretty big compliment from me. But maybe the more useful compliment is that I spent money to buy a ticket to see it again at a festival tonight when I already got to see it for free!

Review By: BeoBaxter91
A lot of good with just a few challenges. What indie film should be, IMO.
This is my first review, so apologies if it’s not critic-y enough. I’ll go through what worked best, what didn’t work as well, and why I thought that, but I guess a good place to start is why I came on here to write a review in the first place (besides the fact there aren’t any comments on reviews, lol): I keep turning over this film in my head and coming back to it and that’s really unusual for a random indie at a local film festival. Second, I think a lot of people are going to have opinions on this film, because that’s that’s what we do as a culture these days when art doesn’t fit our boxes or, like this one does, challenges our stereotypes and judgements about others, and groups of others. Also, as Americans we tend to get weird about things like sex and nudity (especially in the midwest, where I live), if by weird I mean “running around acting like the sky is going to fall down,” and I do.

So yeah, let’s put that out there first. I’m surprised the other reviewers haven’t mentioned it. This is a movie set in Las Vegas, with a bunch of 20 somethings. There’s sex and nudity in the film. It’s not an erotic film, and it’s not a salacious film (by objective standards), and the sex and nudity (which, to be fair, is a few butts, some side boob, and a lot of implied nudity, with a couple brief full frontal shots) makes sense for the characters, the premise, and the stories, journeys, and struggles they’re dealing with. But let’s be honest. Some folks will hear there’s a male full frontal shot (it’s not in a sexual situation) and immediately find a bunch of different things “wrong” with the film. I’ve been here long enough. So maybe the upfront disclaimer is if that kind of thing isn’t your thing, just don’t see the film. But if you don’t sweat that kind of thing, I really, really recommend it.

Because there’s not much wrong with this as an actual film and it’s kind of mind-blowing (save one thing–the reason I have it a 9 and not a 10) that a first time writer-director and bunch of unknowns made something this careful, constrained, and affecting. It doesn’t subscribe to any tropes, doesn’t feel the need to move any faster or slower than the story and characters require, and boy does it all pay off at the end with some of the best acting and climactic pacing I’ve ever seen.

The reason I can’t give it a 10 is that it is obviously not a polished studio production, though it comes REALLY close, you do have some little tells like inopportune camera shake here and there (which, also to be fair, is used intentionally and to really strong effect in other parts of the movie, where you feel like you’re right in there with the people) or a scene or setting that’s a solid 9, but you know would have gone from a 9 to a 10 if they’d had the money to open up the world a bit, or shoot in more exotic or challenging locations. But that’s splitting hairs in a bit, because anyone who goes to see this is going to know they’re seeing a human, character-driven indie. While it would be nice to see more location shoots in Las Vegas casinos, or on the Strip (there are some!) just to really celebrate and immerse ourselves in the place, it’s understandable why we didn’t for financial and maybe story reasons. I will say the locations do become almost like characters themselves, and watching them change over time of day, etc. (sunlight is really a big factor in this film as it is in Las Vegas) is so interesting and that wouldn’t have happened with more settings and use of more familiar flashier places, so, who knows?

How will you know if you like it? I’d say if you find movies that push boundaries and convention a bit, this is a great movie for you. If you like movies that do melodrama, but in a grounded, believable, relatable way, this is definitely a movie for you, especially by the third act. If you like seeing characters who represent different sexualities, races, ethnicities, etc. In a story where those things have almost nothing to do with the film (they just are), this is a good film for you. And if you like films about people who mess up and make wrong calls and are trying to figure out who they are with a mix of family of origin and choice, this really delivers on that front, too.

I suspect some people will try to limit it or characterize this as a coming of age drama, or an erotic drama (again, it’s not, it just has bodies and sex, but not in a particularly erotic context), or even an LGBT drama, an I think all of them are true, but none of them describe the movie, truly. This is an interesting drama, an ensemble piece that showcases some really good acting, and it’s set in a very specific word, with very specific people, but has little to do with those specifics as a story point, the setting and the characteristics are the jumping off point for some characters you won’t be able to forget about when you leave the theater or turn off your computer, which is sort of where I am this morning, writing a review on IMDb…

The easy comparisons here are to BOOGIE NIGHTS or SHAME but that just, again, I think is because we have so few films told about male protagonists like this. It definitely shares elements with these, but if you want a better parallel in general, I’d go with Steven Soderbergh’s debut film, Sex Lies & Videotape. That’s the comparison–a new director, a cast of characters and actors you can’t stop watching or thinking about, and a story that moves slowly and deliberately, but you really feel delivers something in the end. Like you got what you needed, if not what you thought you were coming for, as a film, if that makes any sense. But in the end, I don’t think this movie can be easily described, which is a pretty good compliment for a first time writer director and a bunch of unknowns!

Review By: marross-34479

Other Information:

Original Title Station to Station
Release Date 2022-01-07
Release Year 2021

Original Language en
Runtime 2 hr 8 min (128 min)
Budget 0
Revenue 0
Status Released
Rated Unrated
Genre Drama
Director Benjamin Bryant
Writer Benjamin Bryant, Matthew Weaver
Actors David Eggers II, Jordan Getty, Cate Farrow
Country United States
Awards 13 wins & 15 nominations
Production Company N/A
Website N/A


Technical Information:

Sound Mix Stereo
Aspect Ratio 2.39:1
Camera Red Raven 4.5K
Laboratory N/A
Film Length N/A
Negative Format N/A
Cinematographic Process N/A
Printed Film Format N/A

Original title Station to Station

Director

Director

Cast

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