Pluskylang
Great Film overall
Loui Blair
It's a feast for the eyes. But what really makes this dramedy work is the acting.
Billy Ollie
Through painfully honest and emotional moments, the movie becomes irresistibly relatable
lizzyblueyez
I'm sorry to say it but:This little boy is so mean (cussing every 1 out, kicking pit bulls,hitting little kids)! But then when they showed his home environment-that explained some of it.He has a talent for riding the dirt bikes,and wants to join that bike group, it's a outlet for him to get away from his life (which I can see a pretty rough one) I just wish they wouldn't ride their bikes in the streets and get chased by the police. Maybe they can build a track or something for them.Maybe some club can be created. Something needs to be done to keep them off the main streets.I understand the police trying to keep them and pedestrians and others safe.
hatcher-31393
The audio wasn't always that good, especially in the beginning and it was difficult to understand what Pug was saying. But as I hung in there either the audio improved or I grew accustomed to his speech or both.From some of the reviews the hatred and disdain are apparent but the fact of the matter is that this is documentary offering a slice of 'another' culture, and whether one likes it or not, that 'is' their culture that has been imposed upon them for various reasons be they political, social, or economic. So the film is showing how Pug and his family live and not how the viewers may wish that they lived. Superficially Coco is a lousy mother and yet it made perfect sense that she was because she's doing the best she can with what she has available. She'd been a stripper ("exotic dancer") in her youth which meant someone had failed to get through to her the importance of education. So she capitalized on the only thing she 'thought' she had going for her. Now she's older and interested in health care and enrolls in a course to help get a job and seemed to do pretty well learning CPR which only went to show she'd lacked proper direction in her youth. Unfortunately the cycle continues with Pug because her cursing is basically the limit of her vocabulary and merely her frustration at her inability to effectively convey the importance of education to Pug - because she regrets the mistakes of her life and clearly sees the dangerous route he's about to embark upon. Pug stated at least one teacher disliked him,and having experienced instances when teachers disliked me and I was wrongfully punished for things I hadn't done, I can understand the attractiveness of the freedom and notoriety of being a 12 O'clock Boy to a young boy compared with schooling. Sadly however his youth blinds him to the broader picture.Nice little twist for an ending. After he'd successfully stolen back his bike, being in the van gave meaning to the reason he was in the van in the opening scene. I wonder what Pug and Coco think about Baltimmore being currently in the news because of the "Knockas"?
Estacio O'Macy
I love motorcycles, so I thought I'd like this movie. I did like it, but I was surprised to find it wasn't really about motorcycles. It was about a young pup of a kid that seemed like he could grow up to be a veterinarian, but year after year that light fades. It was more about a social setting than motorcycles. It's about hope or lack of. It's about not having (or seeing) any opportunity. I saw no glorification. The subjects might have built the wheelies up, but the filmmaker provided counterpoints. I saw no answers. They weren't preaching. There really weren't even any questions. I would have liked to have had real periodic interviews with the kid, Pug, to see where his head was. Seems like a lot of people don't like the movie, because they don't like the subject. At the end of the day, it isn't a bad film to start a conversation.
poplacork
ARE YOU FREAKING KIDDING ME? Any kid with a mini bike with less than 5hp or anyone without head and tail lights are doing this every day. Maybe I should produce a documentary of women rubbing lotion on their hands and their occasional struggle to open a jar. It might be worth it if I make the same $44K at the box office as this film did. At best this is a home video of someone's kid that showed up at the box office. Maybe we should all do this. Oh wait... that's what YouTube is for.To complete my mandatory 10 lines I will say, it saddens me that a young man's greatest desire is to be a part of even the smallest of efforts to demonstrate support for antisocial behavior.