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Steel City (2006)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:29
Fresh:25
Rotten:4
Average Rating:6.8/10
Runtime: 1 hr 35 mins
Genre: Family Interaction, Independent, Brothers, Fathers And Sons
Synopsis: Films about complex relationships among men are few and far between; even rarer are films about complex relationships among working-class men. Steel City tells the psychologically rich story of a... Films about complex relationships among men are few and far between; even rarer are films about complex relationships among working-class men. Steel City tells the psychologically rich story of a dysfunctional family of men in a depressed midwestern steel town who have been torn apart by years of mistrust, anger, and irresponsibility. In the wake of his father's incarceration for killing a woman, 20-something PJ Lee drifts aimlessly, losing one job, then another, scuffling with his tough, philandering brother, and halfheartedly pursuing a girl from work. Evicted from his house, he accepts an offer to live with his estranged, bossy uncle, Vic. But Vic demands a level of accountability and communication that overwhelms PJ, and, like all the men in his family, he bolts. Just when things seem as intractable as the Illinois winter ice, subtle shifts allow each member of the Lee clan to inch together into a new kind of maturity. What makes Steel City extraordinary are its intelligence and penetrating honesty about human behavior. First-timer Brian Jun never confines his characters or story to neat little formulas; rather, he soulfully embraces the nuances and complications of family, love, and circumstance. Raw performances by a talented and focused cast; an authentic, textured sense of place; and crisp camerawork all make this an exquisite, emotionally satisfying debut. --© Sundance Film Festival [More]
Starring: John Heard, Tom Guiry, America Ferrera, Raymond J. Barry
Starring: John Heard, Tom Guiry, America Ferrera, Raymond J. Barry, Laurie Metcalf
Director: Brian Jun
Director: Brian Jun
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Release:
May 6, 2008
Reviews for Steel City
The stilted dialogue, relying too heavily on speeches, robs the film of believability -- which disappears completely with its happy ending.
Excellent performances by a good cast and a fairly authentic look at working-class struggles go only so far in Brian Jun's Steel City, which paints an industrial Minnesota municipality entirely in tones of gray and blue.
Steel City yearns to show the sensitive side of blue-collar males. The visual backdrops are believable. The action in the foreground, well, that's another story.
Whatever Steel City lacks in oomph or even originality, it at least breaks even with its working-class authenticity and unexpectedly well-rounded ensemble.
Many traps await novice filmmakers, but writer-director Jun has bypassed most in his absorbing debut.
Steel City is a moving look at fathers and sons. [Director] Jun neither romanticizes nor pathologizes blue-collar family life. In this earnest rust belt indie, doing the right thing means tipping the scale of justice.
For big chunks in the middle of the movie, Steel City seems lost and styleless, but it builds a cumulative power as we get closer to learning what's up.
The phrase 'small, personal film' can sound like an alibi for a trivial and self-indulgent vanity project, but Brian Jun's well-crafted Steel City embodies the highest promise of the term.
Writer-director-editor Brian Jun doesn’t let all of his characters off easy, but he clearly has affection for every one of them.
Brian Jun has crafted a sensitively observed and unexpectedly hopeful drama about atonement in Steel City.
[Director Jun pounds] out a suitably gritty atmosphere, and there's real chemistry between Ferrera and the excellent, quietly expressive Guiry. He's an actor still looking for his big break; this is a fine time to discover him before everyone else does.
There is a natural cohesion to the cast, everyone working together to present a sturdy, emotionally powerful drama.
A family drama that is the visual equivalent of a Bruce Springsteen song, Steel City offers several standout performances and a satisfying low-key story.
Set in a decaying industrial town in downstate Illinois, writer-director Brian Jun's gritty first feature is a heartfelt portrait of a fractured working-class family.
In writer and director Brian Jun's film, the story isn't set up so neatly, and, at first, the ambiguity builds tension.
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