SYNOPSICS
Take Me Out (2018) is a English movie. Joe Shanks has directed this movie. Sonya Barnes,Angela Davis,Idrees Degas,Lindsey Danielle Fackler are the starring of this movie. It was released in 2018. Take Me Out (2018) is considered one of the best Drama,Family,Sport movie in India and around the world.
Take Me Out is a dramatic, feature film with baseball at its center, about an upper class, black suburban, Chicago family. It will explore marriage, infidelity, education, and teenager relationships. Teenager, Nicholas Dupree, struggles with unwanted pressures of his over possessive father, Farris, while dealing with a sibling rivalry in his brother Ricky. With the help of his mother, Carol, and an old family friend, Mr. Johnson, a former major league baseball player, he finds his path in life. This film will display the major issues and a dramatic analysis of what goes on behind closed doors in the home of what seems to be the perfect all American family.
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Take Me Out (2018) Reviews
A penetrating look
A penetrating look into a suburban black family and how the trials and tribulations are all the same. Was really impressed by the lead actor. At times, the art direction lacked a bit, but the quality of the acting and the depth of the dialogue and moments of silence really resonated with me.
Very captivating story
Excellent indie drama with a solid cast and quality film making. I highly recommend it!
A good story hat needs to be told
This story is about a family who had it all but because the husband and father had alterior motives it messed up his family. But they were strong enough to bounce back. See how
Once You See It, Follow Your Path
Don't be fooled by the baseball-centric title and marketing imagery: You don't have to know the difference between balls and strikes to find one of life's most compelling themes at work at the core of "Take Me Out." That's because Joe Shanks retells the age-old story of purpose; of finding one's path naturally, borne of one's own conclusions and desires, and free from the claustrophobic expectations of others (clumsily well-intentioned or otherwise). On Shanks' side in his tale-telling is a series of astute casting choices: Darwin Smith, Sonya Barnes, and Idrees Degas deliver the core acting, and they do it in a way that allows us to get out of the weeds of technical evaluation of the film so its themes can better play on our heads and our sense of self: Am I doing what I want to be doing, and did I make my own choices in getting here? Inevitably, this is the question that plagues us now and may be the last we ask of ourselves on our respective death beds. Between now and then, filmic storytelling in exploration of this huge existential question will continue; some efforts will make the grade and others will slip, same as it ever was. Take Me Out meets the standard, and is the kind of brain food that inspires.
A story of lofty expectations
Take Me Out is an urban family drama that fans of modern melodrama will surely enjoy. From start to finish, this film is filled with conflict; from a verbally abusive and cheating father, to a son's struggle with lofty expectations, to a mother's plight to choose between what is right and what makes her feel whole. Darwin Smith leads the cast as an empathetic son at the center of it all who flashes moments of nuanced, visual comedy to alleviate some of the thick tension. With a large cast and a host of family problems, there's a character in here for everyone to relate to.