muted

Please Stand By

Rating6.7 /10
20181 h 33 m
United States
16613 people rated

A young autistic woman runs away from her caregiver in an attempt to submit her 500-page manuscript to a "Star Trek" writing competition at Paramount Pictures.

Comedy
Drama

User Reviews

user1015266786011

16/07/2024 10:55
Please Stand By-720P

Ndey Sallah Faye

16/07/2024 10:55
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Biki Biki Malik

16/07/2024 10:55
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Biggie

29/05/2023 13:01
source: Please Stand By

Nayara Silva

23/05/2023 05:48
This is a great film about creative and individual minds and about ambition and hope. If you are a star trek fan you'll also love this non sci/fi film. I'm giving away no spoilers for Trekkies :-)

Ajishir♥️

23/05/2023 05:48
REVIEW - PLEASE STAND BY Very occasionally a film comes your way that you have never heard of but the synopsis sounds interesting so you think to yourself why not. Confession time, I'm a big fan of science fiction including Star Trek so this film certainly got my attention. Before you read any further and without giving away any spoilers this IS NOT a science fiction film but it is a lovely, funny story which is told in a way that makes you interested in Wendy. One to watch if your a science fiction fans or not. Lovely feel good film about understanding and no violence, swearing. Recommended viewing. Rating 10 out of 10

Mohamed Gnégné

23/05/2023 05:48
After seeing the trailer for "Please Stand By", I was immediately intrigued. As a Trekkie, that angle hooked me right away, and the collection of acting talent and interesting story ideas seemed to be a good mix. I was disappointed to see the film come to streaming so quickly after basically no theatrical run. After watching, however, I now better understand that while not being a bad film by any means, "Please Stand By" is just "okay" from beginning to end, doing nothing to really make itself special in the process. For a basic plot summary, this film tells the story of Wendy (Dakota Fanning), an autistic young woman with a talent for writing and a love of Star Trek. She discovers that Paramount Pictures is holding a Trek script contest, and when she is unable to mail her entry due to her condition, she decides to light out for Los Angeles by herself (and dog Pete, of course). While sister Audrey (Alice Eve) and therapist Scottie (Toni Collette) try to track her down, Wendy experiences life outside her sheltered existence for the first time. Like I said, this isn't a bad movie in any sense. At its core, it is a good story of an autistic young woman trying to understand her place in the world and figure out what her life is all about. Fanning's portrayal of this is excellent, without which the entire film would have indeed been tough to get through. She carries most of the load here, and does it admirably. You'll be rooting for her and every part of her quest, so at least there is somewhat of a viewer investment present. The problem, and I can't quite put my finger on it, is that nothing in "Please Stand By" really stands out (again, aside from Fanning's performance). It hits all the beats it should and tries to drum up as much emotion as possible, but it just feels hollow (as if I were feeling for the characters because I knew I should be, not because I actually was). The whole film just lacked that ability to make viewers truly feel like a lot is at stake. Not helping matters is that, oddly, the Star Trek angle to this film isn't nearly as fleshed out as it needed to be. This was a key part of the story, but I felt like it was used more as a plot device than anything really meaningful. Instead of her Trek fandom being the key to her journey, it only seems to be the catalyst for her journey to LA by herself. It just felt like an odd juxtaposition all the way through. Overall, I now understand why "Please Stand By" did not get a big theatrical release. It just doesn't offer enough of anything new to the viewing public. A similar movie (and one that did a much better job) is "Rain Main" starring Tom Cruise & Dustin Hoffman. That movie had truly memorable moments regarding how someone deals with a personality disorder. This one, though, just hits the standard beats only to find those hits to be mostly hollow instead of meaningful.

Dylan Connect

23/05/2023 05:48
As a person with autism, I am tired of seeing my ASD used as little more than a joke to assume people. Hollywood does not help address or empower these topics and conditions, they just exploit it for their own financial gain. The social awkwardness and anxiety of autism can be isolating and devastating, I know this, but to others it might look funny on the big screen. Don't do that. Don't laugh at people. We're not "nerds", we're not JOKES for your amusement, thank you. Thank u, next.

Larissa

23/05/2023 05:48
This movie made me flatline. No ups, no downs... characters were unrelatable and were unable to convey emotion - and I can admittedly cry at a good movie. This left me with nothing - no better understanding of autism, of the struggles you might go through as the sibling with it or someone within the general entourage of such a person. The best part of this movie was the dog.

AYOUB ETTALEB 1

23/05/2023 05:48
Since I have autism, I'm constantly on the lookout for stories about people like me. On account that I believe that stories about the life of people with autism tell me more about autism than diagnostic manuals. That is, of couse, if the stories are told by the subject in question, or close to a personal account. This movie appears to neither. It made me angry a lot of times, how close the character was to prejudiced images of asperger. And how the strangeness of the main character was told in relation to normality. For instance, since it is quite common that neither greeting or hugging comes easily for poeple with autsim, when the woman supervising the home (who called Wendy patient, is he ther her doctor or therapist?!!) uses a whistle to greet and som strange pseudo hug in place of a hug, I don't feel that these rituals are for the sake of Wendy. As much as they are to comfort people around her, that need her to act according to nomalized rituals to feel empathy towards her. So if I where to think of it a some sort of feelgood movie, it would be for people with friends or family of people with autism, but then again, if a feelgood movie reproduce prejudice, then the good only feels good as long as you are in the dark, of that you are partaking i reproducing values that can be percieved as degrading. Of course this is my personal opinion from an autistic perspective. I think that people making movies about autism should be read or viewed by people with the diagnosis, since this movie unfortunately is quite more common than uncommon
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