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01:37
Widower and aging Brooklyn hipster Frank starts a band with his teenage daughter Sam just before she leaves home to attend college in California. When a song of theirs finds success online, it complicates Frank's attempts to let go of his dreams of stardom and allow his daughter to find her own path in life.
Rating
PG-13 (for some drug references and brief language)
Director
Brett Haley
Studio
Gunpowder & Sky
Writer
Brett Haley, Marc Basch
- The most amazing film I've ever had the pleasure of seeing. I was so lucky to see this film with my own father and it had us both in fits of laughter and tears. Please go see this film.Reply
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- Hearts Beat Loud steals your heart, makes it beat faster and you'll love this story out loud.Reply
- Both actors are capable of projecting nuclear levels of charisma, so it's fun just to watch them share the screen.Reply
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- The real charm isn't in the way the story unfolds, but in the human moments shared onscreen. Offerman and Clemons feel at first like an unlikely pair, but their chemistry is genuine.Reply
- The messiness of the script or the lack of an aesthetic approach just don't seem to matter all that much. "Hearts Beats Loud" knows exactly what it is.Reply
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- The two leads have a pleasant chemistry that elevates each exchange and build out a meaningful-and meaningfully deep-relationship that's easy to engage with and root for.Reply
- Hearts Beat Loud will put a spring in your step. The music is great, the story is heartwarming, plus Offerman and Clemons make a great father/daughter duo.Reply
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- In a rare leading man role, Offerman exudes charm and charisma in a performance that shatters his Ron Swanson image (said as a devout Parks and Recreation fan).Reply
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- Kiersey Clemons proves she's the real deal. As for the film around her, Haley's 21-drum solo salute to the passage of time is, like Frank, merely fine.Reply