Midnight Special

  • USA Untitled Jeff Nichols/Sci-Fi Project (working title) (more)
Trailer 2

Plots(1)

After rescuing his son, Alton, from a fundamentalist religious sect who are convinced his mysterious powers are the key to their salvation, Roy (Michael Shannon), Alton and their bodyguard Lucas (Joel Edgerton) are on the run for their lives. What starts as a desperate escape from a fearsome cult soon attracts the attention of secretive government forces who believe Alton to be a threat to mankind's very existence. With the trio's fate hanging in the balance, Roy will stop at nothing to keep his son from harm and discover the truth to his unbelievable powers that could change the world forever. (Entertainment One)

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Trailer 2

Reviews (7)

Marigold 

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English Euphoric opening scene (the best road tension since Drive), very good first hour, and a few solid scenes after it. Unfortunately, the rest is one of the worst things Nichols has ever written/filmed. The conclusion is purely full retard... i.e., full late Shyamalan. A terrible pity... as a tribute to seventies sci-fi ok, but as a dramatic whole with a rather subtle psychological line its very scattered. [Berlinale 2016] ()

3DD!3 

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English Great cast, focused direction, old-fashioned sci-fi feel. Unfortunately, it's a bit bland in the end. It doesn't make use of the interesting themes it presents. There’s no catharsis, nothing. Adam Driver is woefully underused, and so is Sam Shepard. The comparisons to E.T. are spot on, but it doesn’t win your heart. Jeff Nichols seems unsure of what he wants to say. ()

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DaViD´82 

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English The movie strives hard to be a more sophisticated Carpentner´s Starman. At first it works pretty well, but the closer the conclusion is, the less this true this statement is. Nichols is scoring an own goal by a silly script. Fortunately, he does he best to dealt with it as a director and the cast also did not leave him in the lurch. With the honorable exception of Lieberher, who, however, is to some extent excused by the cruelly ungrateful role of a wise child. But despite all the stupid naivety, it keeps a captivating atmosphere all the time, and thanks to Stone behind the camera, it's exceptionally well-put in terms of visuals. As a result, it is more interesting than really good, but it´s interesting because... Well, in an interesting / nice way. ()

POMO 

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English E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial for the new millennium? Not a chance. Midnight Special is rather like an average episode of The X-Files. Though it is well cast and the plot is well paced, the film is emotionally flat (with only a succinct depiction of the characters), not very clever (a boy is able to knock a satellite out of the sky through force of will, but he can’t stop a car in which he is being kidnapped by two old men?!) and, in working with the genre, it merely repeats familiar motifs without the slightest update or surprise. The climax reaches for narrative grandeur, but it doesn’t offer even a fraction of the awe or intellectual depth of similarly conceived genre climaxes (The AbyssArrivalAnnihilation). For Nichols, this must have been just a routine studio commission; I don’t believe that he made Midnight Special for creative gratificaiton. Two and a half stars. ()

kaylin 

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English You wait for something big in this film for too long, and when it finally comes, it's not what you imagined. There are good scenes, but even better acting performances, with Michael Shannon being simply great in every role for me. Adam Driver shows that he is not just Kylo Ren, although you will still feel that he plays somewhat the same, even though more on the good side. ()

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