It all begins in a small Oregon town, when shy Sam confesses to his protective older brother Rocky that he is getting pummeled daily by the towering school bully, George. Together, they plan the perfect payback, inviting George on a birthday river trip tailor-made to end in the bully's humiliation. Rocky's pals Clyde and Marty and Sam's budding girlfriend Millie also join the journey, which starts almost immediately with misgivings. Seeing George in a new light, as a lonely kid desperate for friendship and attention, Sam wants to call the whole thing off. But the boat and the plot are already... in motion, and no one can foresee the surprises and accidents that are to come.
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this film was awesome!
this film was one of the best ive seen in a while, their are mixed reviews for this film because it ends giving the viewer different perceptions, i enjoyed the ending to this film, beacause it showed another side to the bully that was misunderstood, which when you see the film for a second time gives you a different potrayal of the kid.
the idea may have been basic, but the point to it was the outcome and the sudden drastic changes it made to their lives.
great acting, great story, great charecters. loved it!!
Mean Creek Bullied teen Rory Culkin teams up with his older brother to teach the culprit a lesson - with tragic consequences. American indie from first-time writer-director Jacob Aaron Estes
Billed as "like an adolescent Heart Of Darkness", Mean Creek is too modest a film to live up to such ambition. Instead it's a well-crafted, well-acted, but over-earnest investigation of bullying set against a picturesque river trip backdrop.
Sam (Culkin) is close to his older brother Rocky (Morgan), so discusses with him the problem of George (Peck), a bigger kid at school. George has been bullying Sam, whose plight is ignored by other kids and teachers alike. So the br...
Mean Creek
Tense drama of the feral instincts of the young, in which decency and bravado battle for supremacy; as the excursion goes horribly wrong, the group's emotional and moral crisis rings terribly true.
Mean Creek
'Lord Of The Flies' meets 'Deliverance'.
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This movie definitely was powerful, I admit I had some tears. The best part about the movie is you are torn between who was right and who was wrong. 4 stars, and this movie will be added into my "Intelligent Movies" playlist.
I am glad I gave this movie a chance and just hit the play button. I never found it slow or lacking in any manner. The acting was stellar and the script well laid out. 4.5/5
I liked this film and the whole storyline behind it, but I thought the ending could use some work as it really didn't seem to wrap things up very well.
Not a bad movie, and not the best movie you'll see this year, but its watchable. They could have done more with the ending too, but I can understand why they left it there. I'd give it a 3/5 or a 7.8/10.
The film is amazing. The story is dark and disturbing. The acting by all the kids are really, really good. Josh Peck acted as the sad, lonely disturbed bully so well. 3 1/2 out of 4 stars
This is a movie show casing prime example of the effects of life and death when put into the perspective of adolesent angst. The acting was brillant and the story line showed promise and then lost its glisten towards the end. Overall, despite its dark and, at times, disturbing nature, I would recommend it to any one 12 years and older.
It sickened me to think about what those kids had done; and about how none stood up and tried to help. Still, it was a great movie; and once again Josh Peck was amazing.