2007 British film
Young@Heart |
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Fox Searchlight Pictures |
Release dates | |
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Running time | 107 minutes |
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Country | United Kingdom |
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Language | English |
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Director
senior citizens
that sings various rock and pop songs, and their rehearsals for their performances.
Synopsis
senior citizens with an average age of eighty, is directed by the genial, but demanding, Bob Cilman. In preparation for a concert in their hometown of
Northampton, Massachusetts, and their next European tour, they spend seven weeks learning new songs by the likes of
Sonic Youth,
James Brown,
Allen Toussaint,
Coldplay,
Jimi Hendrix,
Talking Heads, and
Prince, a task that is daunting for the members and frequently frustrating for Cilman. At one point, the chorus takes a break from rehearsals to perform at a nearby low-security prison, where they are figuratively, and then literally, embraced by the inmates. The passing of two members of the group in rapid succession only increases the determination of the remaining members to have the new material ready in time for the big show, and the concert proves to be a major success with the community.
Production and release
The film was produced for British television network
, and the Philadelphia International Film Festival before going into limited release in the United States in 2008.
Box office performance
On 9 April 2008, the film opened in four theaters in the United States, grossing $50,937 its opening weekend. It eventually grossed a total of $3,992,189 in the US.[3]
Critical reception
Young@Heart received largely favorable reviews from critics. On
weighted average score of 75 out of 100, based on 23 reviews.
[5]
New York Times wrote that "At moments the movie ... risks being a cloying, rose-colored study of happy old folks at play, and the cheer sounds forced. But the lives of the several members it examines at some depth are too real and complicated to resemble a commercial starring
Wilford Brimley as a
Norman Rockwell grandpa. The movie offers an encouraging vision of old age in which the depression commonly associated with decrepitude is held at bay by music making, camaraderie and a sense of humor."
[6]
Steve Davis of the Austin Chronicle gave the film 3½ out of four stars. He felt that, "despite an occasional lapse into nudge-nudge jokes about geriatric sex, incontinence, and the driving skills of the elderly," the film "eschews the clichés about old people for something that we can all relate to: our own mortality."
[7]
The film was named the best of the year by Marc Mohan of
Awards and nominations
In addition to the Audience Award at the
and the Warsaw International Film Festival.
Home release
20th Century Fox Home Entertainment released the film on
DVD on 16 September 2008. This release is in
anamorphic widescreen format, with audio tracks in English and Spanish and subtitles in English, Spanish, and French. Bonus features include:
Young@Heart Goes to Hollywood (a short piece about the group performing at a theater in
Hollywood), eight deleted scenes, and the full versions of two
music videos that were shown in the film in an edited form (Young@Heart performing
Talking Heads' "
Road to Nowhere" and the group performing a medley of the
Bee Gees' "
Stayin' Alive" and
Gloria Gaynor's "
I Will Survive").
See also
- Song for Marion (2012), a fictional film that deals with a choir of seniors performing contemporary music.
References
External links