Full of affecting, quiet moments.
Tully (2002)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:51
Fresh:41
Rotten:10
Average Rating:6.9/10
Consensus: A beautifully acted, quietly moving little film.
Theatrical Release:Nov 1, 2002 Limited
Synopsis: "The Truth About Tully" explores a legacy of love between a family of men, and the events of one summer that change their world forever. Through the eyes of Tully Coates Jr. (Anson Mount) - the... "The Truth About Tully" explores a legacy of love between a family of men, and the events of one summer that change their world forever. Through the eyes of Tully Coates Jr. (Anson Mount) - the local hearthrob and eldest son - a world is revealed where secrets are kept close beneath wide open skies as a distant father and his two sons struggle with a past that has come back to haunt them. The loss of their mother years ago has left the Coates boys adrift, each longing for a connection to a woman they never knew. A separation has grown between Tully and his reclusive father (Bob Burrus), who lives in isolation even as he works side by side with his sons. Determined not to meet the same lonely fate, Tully runs wild with the women in town though he is careful to keep them all at a safe distance. Tully's shy younger brother Earl (Glenn Fitzgerald) is just the opposite, possessing an emotional maturity to comprehend things that Tully has yet to see or feel. In his quiet way, Earl is in Tully's shadow – but Earl knows something that Tully may not yet be able to handle. The one thing that Tully and Earl do have in common is an appreciation for Earl's straight-talking best friend Ella (Julianne Nicholson), a young woman smart enough to refuse overtures from a womanizer like Tully and strong enough to become his friend. As Earl watches warily, Tully becomes closer to Ella than anyone expected – but when devastating news pushes Tully into her arms, he runs away before he can begin to feel what might be true love. Tully's discovery of a long buried secret that now threatens his family and their farm brings him to confront his father about the ghosts of a past that have pushed them apart. When he discovers that his father's decisions were made out of love for his family, Tully begins to appreciate his father's strength. With the air cleared, Tully's own true feelings emerge and he comes to learn the delicate art of caring. The film is based on the award-winning story by Tom McNeal , with the screenplay adaptation by Matt Drake and Hilary Birmingham. "The Truth About Tully" is Birmingham's feature directing debut and is produced by Annie Sundberg. -- © TellTale Films [More]
Starring: Anson Mount, Julianne Nicholson, Glenn Fitzgerald, Catherine Kellner
Starring: Anson Mount, Julianne Nicholson, Glenn Fitzgerald, Catherine Kellner, Bob Burrus
Director: Hilary Birmingham
Director: Hilary Birmingham
Screenwriter: Matt Drake, Hilary Birmingham
Producer: Hilary Birmingham, Anne Sundberg
Studio: Small Planet
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Reviews for Tully
Director and co-writer Hilary Birmingham's maiden feature… is a strong, polished, professional indie effort that bodes well for bigger success.
The acting is good and airy, like the setting, in this much more than promising first film.
This quiet, introspective and entertaining independent is worth seeking.
A refreshingly honest and ultimately touching tale of the sort of people usually ignored in contemporary American film. Search it out.
The people in this picture live and work and eat like people I once knew.
The film's unhurried pace is actually one of its strengths. Entirely appropriately, the tale unfolds like a lazy summer afternoon and concludes with the crisp clarity of a fall dawn.
If you can push on through the slow spots, you'll be rewarded with some fine acting.
A very pretty after-school special. It's an effort to watch this movie, but it eventually pays off and is effective if you stick with it.
quietly pulls you into its sun drenched style of American Gothic in the Heartland
The whole movie consists of talk. The characters talk about what used to happen, what's going to happen, what happened while you were looking the other way and listening to people talk.
A quiet family drama with a little bit of romance and a dose of darkness.
A simple, sometimes maddeningly slow film that has just enough charm and good acting to make it interesting, but is ultimately pulled under by the pacing and lack of creativity within.
The believable young people growing on this plot of soil are never predictable; neither are the unmannered, affecting performances.
A portrait that stays with conversations as they unfold, stays with scenes as they progress naturally and stays with small moments that turn into poetry both beautiful and sad.
Pays close and respectful attention to its characters, allowing them time to develop and deepen.
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