Holler
United States
1688 people rated To pay for her education, and the chance of a better life, a young woman joins a dangerous scrap metal crew.
Drama
Cast (18)
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User Reviews
مۘــطــڼۨــﯟڅۡ🦅🦅🦅🦅🦅🦅🔥🔥
08/03/2025 16:06
For making yet another good drama about the dark and dreary shadowlives of american poverty, in the year of the lord 2021. And thanks to the casting crew that has made a marvellous job finding the keyactors to this film, heir heir...
do i sound like an insider or related to the production crew, you might feel so but no, im just a grumpy old man living in norway, drowning myself into yet another pure drama of american socialrealism in situ. Its a film thats so utterly depressing, and so detailed on every spot that youll forget time and place, and with acting far over the limit of expectations, top notch musical soundtrack, and looking upon all the striving people that pays with a broken back and cut away fingers to buy a buck for one and a half because the 1 percenters decides what the price is anyway, and what shall the people of the heartland united states lean on when the corner stone factory disappears to make a nickel and a dime extra when outsourcing abroad, often moving machinery and infrastructure with it, and just leaving the skelletons back of an era that used to be good and proudly spoken of , just not where you and you live.
Its also a film about a teenagers opportunity to enter the litterates of a higher education that has become such a class diviser in the american society. The film example about scrapyarding and eventual looting valuable metal from elsewhere in the dark hours of the diurnal clock, just to survive and try to hold together and put aside money to afford the giant leap for mankind that college/university is. Call me a socialist and i may approve, but im far more reflected than that and may be quite goppy too, but thats far too advanced to elaborate for a man that hasnt got english as birth language...
but this is yet another must see film from the ''slumdistricts'' of USA, its darn realistic, its top notch acting, and just as repressive and depressive as you like it to be. Its not a rollercoaster of action, no, its just pure sensible drama, that the onepercenters deny and defy, even though its adressed to the all with capital letters. Poverty isnt the end my friend, its just a hurdle to climb across on your way to wisdome and freedome... a well made film at all levels, hereby recommended.
Hope Ashley Grusshab
03/03/2025 16:04
Why on earth do people allow movies like this to be made ?!?!? Garbage like these Z budget movies are a waste of time money & brain cells. What Dwight should do is eat a hamburger because he looks like a crack head with Aids.
Hussein Chour
27/02/2025 16:02
I was waiting for something, anything to make this story go somewhere. Typical 2020 movie where they are trying to find themselves. This movie was garbage. Total waste of time. BTW No Spoiler since their was nothing to spoil. Don't waste 90 minutes of your life.
Christelle motidi
26/02/2025 16:02
This is a very powerful movie that captures the underbelly of today's America. There is no doubt that while fictional, the movie portrays real working people, real situations, a morass that too few people escape. The acting by all the major characters is perfect. My only quibble is the darkness (by which I mean lighting) of too many scenes--it can be oppressive, which I'm sure was intended, because the characters are oppressed.
Dany Es
26/02/2025 16:02
I enjoyed this. A very powerful performance from Jessica Barden!
Ayra Starr
26/02/2025 16:02
Greetings again from the darkness. Life in the Midwest rustbelt is often portrayed in movies, but rarely with the authenticity displayed in the first feature film from writer-director Nicole Riegel. These are hard-working folks who maintain hope and keep pushing through the challenges brought on by the collapse of the factory world that left generations in its wake. It's a spinoff of Ms. Riegel's own 2015 short film of the same name, and the story is inspired by her own upbringing in Ohio.
Jessica Barden stars as Ruth, a very bright high school senior who is struggling along with her dropout older brother Blaze (Gus Halper) to make ends meet while mom (Pamela Adlon, the voice of Bobby on "King of the Hill") is in jail due to opioids. Dad is out of the picture. As smart as she is, Ruth is teetering on the line of graduation since she misses so much school time while hustling the streets with her brother looking for aluminum cans to redeem, or any other way to make a few bucks. Despite their lack of funds, Blaze submitted a college application for Ruth without her knowing, and now that she's been accepted, money becomes the focus.
Desperation leads to poor decisions, and soon Ruth and Blaze are working for Hark (Austin Amelio, "The Walking Dead") the owner of a local metal scrap yard. At night, brother and sister join the crew for illegal scrapping at closed factories. It's dangerous work, but the pay is good. The dynamic between older brother Blaze and younger sister Ruth is interesting. He realizes his future looks something like what he's doing now - scratching and clawing for everything. But he sees that Ruth has a path to a brighter future and he strives to keep her focused on that.
Family is key here, and Ruth struggles with how best to deal with her mother. It takes Aunt Linda (Becky Ann Baker, A SIMPLE PLAN, 1998) to explain how Ruth's mother is a victim of the medical profession over-prescribing the pain killers that caused the downfall. In a town that's slowly dying (plants closing), and folks fighting to stay out of poverty, this situation is all too common.
Jessica Barden is memorable from her turn as the friend in HANNA (2011) and from THE END OF THE F***ING WORLD (2017), but this could be a star-making role for her. She is outstanding in much the way Jennifer Lawrence was in WINTER'S BONE (2010), although this movie isn't quite at that level. It's a star turn for Ms. Barden and an impressive debut for director Riegel, who shot in 16mm film - a rarity for indie films. The story and characters are never quite as bleak as what we expect, though the ending is a bit too predictable ... and we are happy for it. You might want to see this one if for no other reason than it's a likely career turning point for both Jessica Barden and Nicole Riegel.
OPENS IN SELECT THEATERS AND ON DEMAND/DIGITAL ON FRIDAY, JUNE 11, 2021.
Luce Oleg’s
25/02/2025 16:02
This was a good movie. Coming from a holler West Virginia, it can be very hard to stay here and have a good job, especially if you live very far out, but I live very close to the Capitol. I don't understand why they keep making movies that seem to be written by people who are ignorant about the college system. You don't have to save for college, they're obviously it's a great idea and goal, but there is a lot of help especially if you come from a poor background, and there are always loans. I understand them wanting to paint a picture of a struggling young lady wanting to better herself, but please make it more realistic and uplifting to those who could better themselves who may watch this movie and assume that it's impossible.
Miacloe95❤🏳️🌈
24/02/2025 16:01
Really poignant film that got to me. Was not expecting it AT ALL. Jessica Barden is great.
wil.francis_
23/02/2025 16:01
I can't believe this didn't get any prizes. This is one of the best movies of the 21st century. Raw, definitely, but masterfully done. Great job from all departments, from the sound editing that at times manages to have two different actions rolling at the same time, to the amazing job of the lead actress, to all the supporting cast, production design, locations, etc. It's not easy to pull this off. A read one review that billed this as "amateurish"! WTF? Just try to do it yourself, buddy. We'll see who's the amateur.
If you're coming into this movie expecting to see Fast & Furious action sequences, then you are most likely brain damaged and you have no business writing movie reviews for anyone else other than your neurologists.
PaaQueci Duker
23/02/2025 16:01
This is a wonderful, sensitive, and poignant film about personal hardships in the manufacturing center of an Ohio town. The acting is superb and the personal struggles are real. Some reviewers felt disappointed that there was no action, and although there was some tension in parts, there needn't be action to make a great movie. This drama is simply not conducive to action since a mellow and bleak tone, one of hopelessness, pervades the film which aligns with the theme. Although Ruth talks about going to college and getting out of the never ending cycle of downtrodden existence her crack mom and guardian older brother experience, as well as others in the community, she realizes the difficulty of breaking away. She and her brother tried to support themselves collecting scrap metal from abandoned manufacturing plants for a hardnosed scrap metal business owner who undercuts the value of what they bring in. Given all that Ruth proclaimed throughout the movie, about the importance of her getting out from under by going to college, the ending was quite disappointing. It seemed like the director was thinking that there was enough of this film made and suddenly thought it was time to end it. At that point, Ruth's emotional ties to her brother overtake her college aspirations and it appears she remains stuck in the same kind of dying manufacturing town life. I can only hope it would be temporary.
The one problem I felt that was particularly bothersome because it lacked authenticity, was that Ruth and her brother talk about how the cost of going to college was essentially prohibitive since they were so poor. That was the only unreal aspect of this film since someone as smart and poor as Ruth was, would not have a problem with cost of going to college.