Phim lẻ
Nội dung
Cuối những năm 1950, một nhà tâm lý học tham vọng khám phá những giới hạn của tâm trí con người khi ông điều trị cho ba bệnh nhân đều tin rằng họ là Chúa.
Thông tin sản xuất
March 5, 2020
Ngày phát hành
$23,000,000
Ngân sách
$14,590,514
Doanh thu
United States of America
Region (US)
Canada
Region (CA)

Warner Bros. Pictures
US

Pearl Street Films
US
Mayhem Pictures
US

Bron Studios
CA
Đạo diễn
Gavin O'Connor
Female
Jamie Marshall
Female
Diễn viên
Ben Affleck
Jack Cunningham
Al Madrigal
Dan
Michaela Watkins
Beth
Janina Gavankar
Angela
Glynn Turman
Doc
Melvin Gregg
Marcus Parrish
Brandon Wilson
Brandon Durrett
Will Ropp
Kenny Dawes
Fernando Luis Vega
Sam Garcia
Ben Irving
Bobby Freeze
Da'Vinchi
Devon Childress
John Aylward
Father Edward Devine
T.K. Carter
Russ
Rachael Carpani
Diane
Todd Stashwick
Kurt
Nancy Linehan Charles
Anne
Dan Lauria
Gerry Norris
Chris Bruno
Sal
Matthew Glave
Coach Lombardo
Jeremy Ratchford
Matty (Bartender)
Jayne Taini
Susan Norris
Jeremy Radin
Father Mark Whelan
Nico David
Ryan
Sal Velez Jr.
Miguel
Yeniffer Behrens
Sofia
Christine Horn
Doctor
Josh Latzer
Construction Worker #1
Manny Streetz
Construction Worker #2
Justice Alan
David
James P. Harkins
Burly Man
Mike G.
Employee
Chieko Hidaka
Haley
Charlotte Evelyn Williams
Student
Marlene Forte
Gale
Shay Roundtree
Ken
Chad Mountain
Pat
Cynthia Rose Hall
Female Friend - Nancy
Brian Nuesi
Basketball Player 7 (uncredited)
Edelyn Okano
Denise (uncredited)
Carly Schneider
Cheerleader (uncredited)
Caleb Thomas
Mike Ball Boy (uncredited)
Hayes MacArthur
Eric (uncredited)
Mason Blomberg
Birthday Party Guest (uncredited)
Trailer
Phim tương tự cho bạn

Ai đã đánh bại Montreal Expos?
Who Killed the Montreal Expos?
6.7 | Thể Thao • Tâm Lý

Giải cứu bóng đá
The Soccer Football Movie
3.1 | Hài Hước • Thể Thao

Cắm Đầu
Dive (La caída)
6.9 | Thể Thao • Chính kịch

Bí mật giới thể thao: Bê bối Balco
Untold: Hall of Shame
6.5 | Thể Thao • Tài Liệu

Hơi thở sâu nhất
The Deepest Breath
7.7 | Thể Thao • Tài Liệu

Đội Bóng Rổ Đặc Biệt
Champions
6.8 | Hài Hước • Tâm Lý

Big George Foreman: Câu chuyện kỳ diệu về nhà vô địch quyền Anh hạng nặng
Big George Foreman: The Miraculous Story of the Once and Future Heavyweight Champion of the World
6.7 | Thể Thao • Chính kịch

Kickboxer
Kickboxer
6.4 | Hành Động • Thể Thao

The Basketball Diaries
The Basketball Diaries
7.3 | Thể Thao

Balls of Fury
Balls of Fury
5.4 | Hài Hước • Thể Thao

Jerry Maguire
Jerry Maguire
7.3 | Hài Hước • Thể Thao

Tiền Bi
Moneyball
7.6 | Thể Thao

Con Đường Võ Sĩ
Southpaw
7.3 | Hành Động • Thể Thao

Tôi Là Tonya
I, Tonya
7.5 | Hài Hước • Thể Thao

Đội Bóng Nhà Tù
The Longest Yard
6.4 | Hài Hước • Thể Thao

She's the Man
She's the Man
6.4 | Hài Hước • Thể Thao

Cuộc Đua Lịch Sử
Ford v Ferrari
8.1 | Hành Động • Thể Thao

Đội Foxcatcher
Team Foxcatcher
7.2 | Thể Thao • Tài Liệu

Golf thủ nhí
The Short Game
7.3 | Thể Thao • Tài Liệu

Người thay đổi cuộc chơi
The Game Changers
7.8 | Thể Thao • Tài Liệu

Những đứa con hoang bị vùi dập của bóng chày
The Battered Bastards of Baseball
8.0 | Thể Thao • Tài Liệu

Calum von Moger: Không chùn bước
Calum von Moger: Unbroken
6.2 | Thể Thao • Tài Liệu

Đường trở về
The Way Back
6.7 | Thể Thao • Chính kịch

Cuộc Đời Phi Thường Của Chú Chó Enzo
The Art of Racing in the Rain
7.6 | Hài Hước • Thể Thao
Screens & Gallery















International Critic Reviews
If you enjoy reading my Spoiler-Free reviews, please follow my blog @ https://www.msbreviews.com I’m not the greatest fan of inspirational sports dramas, but I also never disliked one. They all follow this storytelling formula that everyone recognizes, but it’s always successful. The protagonist is a miserable human being due to some tragic past. He gets another shot at life, usually an underdog situation, and he ultimately overcomes whatever challenge is thrown at him, including his addictions if he has any. Everyone lives “happily ever after”, and the viewer leaves the theater with a smile because that’s how it makes us feel. It’s incredibly easy to root for an underdog trying to raise its level and to reach something it never believed in. In The Way Back, the basketball team is awful, but Jack teaches them not only how to play better, but how to be a better *team*. Then, it’s just like the synopsis: a win here and there gets everyone back on track, and it’s very entertaining to watch these young kids “grow up” in every possible way. As a sportsman myself, several little details help me enjoy this type of movies even more. However, it’s a straightforward variation of the same cliche, predictable story… until one point. There’s one genuinely surprising development I didn’t see coming. I don’t know if it was due to my “defenses being down” or if Gavin O’Connor and Brad Ingelsby really did a great job at hiding it until the right moment, but it definitely worked. The lack of character-building regarding the secondary ones is probably my biggest issue aside from the formulaic screenplay. There’s one young kid that still has some sort of an arc, but it never gets the deserved consideration. It’s a very protagonist-centered film, and there’s nothing truly wrong with that, especially when Ben Affleck delivers one of his career-best performances. I left him for last because I do believe the whole movie succeeds due to his impressively captivating display. A lot of people talk about how Affleck’s own life and his past struggles with addiction make this a personal interpretation in the sense that he’s just portraying himself. Some people even diminished his performance by saying that “it’s easier to represent ourselves than a fictional character”, which I couldn’t disagree more. It’s an arduous task interpreting a version of our personality, let alone a very somber, sad part of it. It’s not only an enormous acting challenge but also a terrifying personal test. I digress. Honestly, I couldn’t care less about Affleck’s personal life, or anyone’s for that matter. People should stop trying to bring external themes to reviews, it’s one of the first principles film critics learn (but have unfortunately forgotten with time). I don’t know if his experience with addiction helped him with his performance or not, but he looks incredibly committed to his role. He elevates his character, and he carries the whole movie on his shoulders. Brilliant, emotional, and very realistic interpretation of someone dealing with depression, frustration, anger, and an addiction issue. All in all, The Way Back is an inspirational sports drama that follows the genre’s stereotypes and formulaic storytelling, but it’s still very successful in its execution. The secondary characters lack development, but there’s nothing wrong with a protagonist-centered story as long as the main actor delivers an exceptional display. Something Ben Affleck does in an emotionally powerful manner, delivering a genuine portrayal of someone with a tragic past and lots of personal issues. I believe it’s one of his career-best performances. Jack might follow every storyline that ever existed in this genre, but Ben Affleck is reason enough to give Gavin O’Connor’s flick a go. Rating: B
The Way Back (2020) is a return to form for Ben Affleck following an aimless second half of the previous decade – specifically his ill-advised stint in the DC Universe. In this drama directed by Gavin O'Connor and written by Brad Ingelsby (co-writer of the excellent Out of the Furnace), Affleck plays Jack Cunningham, a former high school star basketball player turned alcoholic construction worker who reluctantly accepts a coaching job at his alma mater. How do we know he's an alcoholic? Well, drinking beer in the shower is certainly not a good sign (and there are many others), but it’s mostly Affleck, who not only looks and sounds but for all intents and purposes is the part, turning in a cathartic, demon-exorcising performance. The central portion of the film is by design an abridged version of every high school basketball movie ever made. It’s done competently, with a knowledge of and appreciation for the game of hoops, as well as a sense of humor, but it’s nevertheless an afterthought; it would also be a foregone conclusion, if the script had actually been leading up all along to that buzzer-beating, game-winning, hail Mary shot that shortly segues into a freeze frame of Jack’s triumphantly grinning mug. Its Cinderella story – minus the fairytale happy ending – seems taken right out of many a Hollywood melodrama (because it actually is), but TWB is not – regardless of what All Movie or IMDb may tell you – a sports movie, nor is it about basketball like Hoosiers, or about inner city kids like Coach Carter; its scenes of on-court action and sideline banter, deftly choreographed and zestfully written and delivered but offering little new (other than comically pairing the Foulmouthed Coach with the catholic high school’s “team chaplain”), exist solely to make a point – and a very well made and well taken point it is. This narrative shorthand serves an overarching character study into which the filmmakers have put quite a lot more thought and work, revolving around a man who seemingly drinks just for the sake of getting drunk, and then gradually pulling back to reveal the underlying causes for, and consequences of, his alcoholism. It is said that hitting rock bottom is the beginning of the road to recovery, and the film uses basketball to pull Jack up, push him farther down, and ultimately pull him back up again.