' ].join(''); if ( adsScript && adsScript === 'bandsintown' && adsPlatforms && ((window.isIOS && adsPlatforms.indexOf("iOS") >= 0) || (window.isAndroid && adsPlatforms.indexOf("Android") >= 0)) && adsLocations && adsMode && ( (adsMode === 'include' && adsLocations.indexOf(window.adsLocation) >= 0) || (adsMode === 'exclude' && adsLocations.indexOf(window.adsLocation) == -1) ) ) { var opts = { artist: "", song: "", adunit_id: 100005950, div_id: "cf_async_f02a953c-bda4-4491-86a1-082342069bd9" }; adUnit.id = opts.div_id; if (target) { target.insertAdjacentElement('beforeend', adUnit); } else { tag.insertAdjacentElement('afterend', adUnit); } var c=function(){cf.showAsyncAd(opts)};if(typeof window.cf !== 'undefined')c();else{cf_async=!0;var r=document.createElement("script"),s=document.getElementsByTagName("script")[0];r.async=!0;r.src="//srv.tunefindforfans.com/fruits/apricots.js";r.readyState?r.onreadystatechange=function(){if("loaded"==r.readyState||"complete"==r.readyState)r.onreadystatechange=null,c()}:r.onload=c;s.parentNode.insertBefore(r,s)}; } else { adUnit.id = 'pw-f02a953c-bda4-4491-86a1-082342069bd9'; adUnit.className = 'pw-div'; adUnit.setAttribute('data-pw-' + (renderMobile ? 'mobi' : 'desk'), 'sky_btf'); if (target) { target.insertAdjacentElement('beforeend', adUnit); } else { tag.insertAdjacentElement('afterend', adUnit); } window.addEventListener('DOMContentLoaded', (event) => { adUnit.insertAdjacentHTML('afterend', kicker); window.ramp.que.push(function () { window.ramp.addTag('pw-f02a953c-bda4-4491-86a1-082342069bd9'); }); }, { once: true }); } } tag.remove(); })(document.getElementById('script-f02a953c-bda4-4491-86a1-082342069bd9'));
Synopsis
The truth has many faces.
A star athlete and top student, Luce's idealized image is challenged by one of his teachers when his unsettling views on political violence come to light, putting a strain on family bonds while igniting intense debates on race and identity.
' ].join(''); if ( adsScript && adsScript === 'bandsintown' && adsPlatforms && ((window.isIOS && adsPlatforms.indexOf("iOS") >= 0) || (window.isAndroid && adsPlatforms.indexOf("Android") >= 0)) && adsLocations && adsMode && ( (adsMode === 'include' && adsLocations.indexOf(window.adsLocation) >= 0) || (adsMode === 'exclude' && adsLocations.indexOf(window.adsLocation) == -1) ) ) { var opts = { artist: "", song: "", adunit_id: 100005950, div_id: "cf_async_7523c0e0-0879-4061-9b0e-407f8c3bbb95" }; adUnit.id = opts.div_id; if (target) { target.insertAdjacentElement('beforeend', adUnit); } else { tag.insertAdjacentElement('afterend', adUnit); } var c=function(){cf.showAsyncAd(opts)};if(typeof window.cf !== 'undefined')c();else{cf_async=!0;var r=document.createElement("script"),s=document.getElementsByTagName("script")[0];r.async=!0;r.src="//srv.tunefindforfans.com/fruits/apricots.js";r.readyState?r.onreadystatechange=function(){if("loaded"==r.readyState||"complete"==r.readyState)r.onreadystatechange=null,c()}:r.onload=c;s.parentNode.insertBefore(r,s)}; } else { adUnit.id = 'pw-7523c0e0-0879-4061-9b0e-407f8c3bbb95'; adUnit.className = 'pw-div -tile300x250 -alignleft'; adUnit.setAttribute('data-pw-' + (renderMobile ? 'mobi' : 'desk'), 'med_rect_atf'); if (target) { target.insertAdjacentElement('beforeend', adUnit); } else { tag.insertAdjacentElement('afterend', adUnit); } window.addEventListener('DOMContentLoaded', (event) => { adUnit.insertAdjacentHTML('afterend', kicker); window.ramp.que.push(function () { window.ramp.addTag('pw-7523c0e0-0879-4061-9b0e-407f8c3bbb95'); }); }, { once: true }); } } tag.remove(); })(document.getElementById('script-7523c0e0-0879-4061-9b0e-407f8c3bbb95'));
Director
Director
Producers
Producers
Writers
Writers
Original Writer
Original Writer
Casting
Casting
Editor
Editor
Cinematography
Cinematography
Assistant Directors
Asst. Directors
Executive Producers
Exec. Producers
Lighting
Lighting
Camera Operators
Camera Operators
Production Design
Production Design
Art Direction
Art Direction
Set Decoration
Set Decoration
Special Effects
Special Effects
Visual Effects
Visual Effects
Title Design
Title Design
Stunts
Stunts
Composers
Composers
Sound
Sound
Costume Design
Costume Design
Makeup
Makeup
Hairstyling
Hairstyling
Studios
Countries
Language
Alternative Titles
루스, 류스, Люс, Лус, פנים רבות לאמת, 卢斯, 盧斯, Luz, Dokonalý student, ルース・エドガー, Dokonalý študent
Premiere
27 Jan 2019
-
USA
Sundance Film Festival
Theatrical limited
02 Aug 2019
-
USAR
Theatrical
07 Nov 2019
-
Netherlands
08 Nov 2019
-
Ireland15A
-
UK15
Digital
02 Aug 2019
-
Sweden15
05 Jun 2020
-
JapanPG12
13 Oct 2020
-
Poland16
09 Mar 2021
-
Russia18+
02 Oct 2021
-
France12
Physical
29 Oct 2019
-
USAR
25 Mar 2020
-
AustraliaM
01 Jul 2020
-
France
Australia
France
Ireland
Japan
Netherlands
Poland
Russia
Sweden
UK
USA
27 Jan 2019
-
Premiere
Sundance Film Festival
More
-
We Need To Talk About Kelvin
-
"What's the difference between punishing someone for being a stereotype and rewarding them if they're not?"
An impressive, almost Shakespearean drama about the 'American Dream' as it intertwines with perceptions of race and identity– all told with the doubly-impressive goal of making you identify and root for a teenage sociopath. Thank god the director behind The Cloverfield Paradox also had this in him.
-
“it’s not that simple”
“nothing ever is”
handled with delicate complexity that left me questioning every word and every glance. not much is answered, but it doesn’t matter anyways. what’s more important is the perception of identity and what it means to be good or bad. and how there’s barely an in between. this was sensational
-
i think it's ultimately a bit too writerly (i was not surprised to see this was adapted from a play) but was still fairly impressed by the ease with which it adds code-switching and identity politics to the taut, gaslight thriller. the weaponization of ideological ambiguity and social dynamics into larger ideas of political/personal expectations is solid, the performances are a little more complicated than the writing is and it most impressively has very few illusions of grandeur. a couple of scenes reveal a bit too much of the game ("our lives didn't have to be a political statement") but the film ends appropriately on notes of confusion and ambivalence, offering very few answers to its many questions on racial stereotypes, cultural assimilation, and liberal respectability; only a slow ramping of unsettling contradictions.
-
i can't stop picturing octavia spencer as Ma
-
It’s a very interesting premise delivered by very capable performers, but this is another example of a premise stretched thin when converted from play to screenplay. I like everything the film explores as ideas - most notably performative black masculinity and the ways in which it is shaped by white anxieties and biases. However, the film slowly but surely loses control of the plot until it’s spinning in place, with nothing new or interesting added to the story beyond superficially tense confrontations. It therefore ends in a place that is more muddled than purposefully ambiguous or provocative. I’m also not a fan of its treatment of mental illness, which comes across as dismissive and driven by shock value. Overall the film has plenty of great moments, but it can’t get beyond its own trappings on the whole.
GRADE: B-
-
Watching it I kept thinking "this seems like a play," and then the end credits came and surprise! turns out it's based on a play
-
Holy shit. What a way to comeback after directing The Cloverfield Paradox, which I didn't hate but this is beyond next level in comparison. Naomi Watts, Octavia Spencer, Tim Roth & Kelvin Harrison Jr. (!!) all destroying it in their respective roles. And then we've got J.C. Lee's brilliantly theatrical writing, Madeleine Gavin's editing (Nerve, Mean Creek, etc.), Larkin Seiple's cinematography (Swiss Army Man, Cop Car, etc.), and Geoff Barrow & Ben Salisbury (Ex Machina, Annihilation, etc.) channeling a combination of their inner Max Richter & something along the lines of Jamie xx's "Gosh." Yeah, I shouldn't have slept on this while it was in theatres.
-
it really do be that serious
-
"I understand context."
Okay, so listen. Reviews for this thing have been golden. It has a 90% rating on Rotten Tomatoes at time of writing, which does seem to reflect what most audiences are feeling about it right now. It's getting praise left and right. Kelvin Harrison Jr, so good in It Comes at Night, seems primed to break out via this movie. It's packed to the gills with stars. It's a psychological thriller that directly attacks social ills, which is one of my favorite kinds of films.
But I gotta be honest; I thought it was a crock of shit. That's just me, obviously, but I want to reiterate that a lot of people love this movie, so it's…
-
LUCE...OMG!! What a film! Deception, betrayal, acceptance, prejudice, individuality, racism & assumption. This is by far the best screenplay, best ensemble & best film I’ve seen at Sundance 2019. Naomi Watts is terrific as always while Octavia Spencer & Kelvin Harrison Jr. deliver the best performances of their careers. This screenplay is a masterpiece!
-
i don’t trust any high schooler that’s that good at public speaking