What's happening?

Video Sources 0 Views Report Error

  • Watch traileryoutube.com
  • Source 1123movies
  • Source 2123movies
  • Source 3123movies
  • Source 4123movies
  • Source 5123movies
  • Source 6123movies
  • Source 7123movies
  • Source 8123movies
Winter’s Bone 2010 123movies

Winter’s Bone 2010 123movies

Talking Just Causes WitnessesJun. 11, 2010101 Min.
Your rating: 0
6 1 vote

Synopsis

Watch: Winter’s Bone 2010 123movies, Full Movie Online – Her family home in danger of being repossessed after her dad skips bail and disappears, Ozark teen Ree Dolly (Jennifer Lawrence) breaks the local code of conduct by confronting her kin about their conspiracy of silence. Should she fail to track her father down, Ree Dolly, her younger siblings, and their disabled mother will soon be rendered homeless..
Plot: 17 year-old Ree Dolly sets out to track down her father, who put their house up for his bail bond and then disappeared. If she fails, Ree and her family will be turned out into the Ozark woods. Challenging her outlaw kin’s code of silence and risking her life, Ree hacks through the lies, evasions and threats offered up by her relatives and begins to piece together the truth.
Smart Tags: #female_protagonist #ozark_mountains #family_relationships #drug_trade #family_crisis #search_for_father #rural_setting #uncle_niece_relationship #bail #crystal_meth #mentally_ill_mother #hillbilly #expropriation_of_land #expropriation #patriarchy #murder_of_father #joining_the_army #drug_use #father_daughter_relationship #poverty #drug_dealer


Find Alternative – Winter’s Bone 2010, Streaming Links:

123movies | FMmovies | Putlocker | GoMovies | SolarMovie | Soap2day


Ratings:

7.1/10 Votes: 143,935
94% | RottenTomatoes
90/100 | MetaCritic
N/A Votes: 1484 Popularity: 11.406 | TMDB

Reviews:

Shades of Deliverance, deja vu
This film tells the sad story of inbred, poverty-stricken, Missouri Ozark hillbillies trying to scratch out a living on poor soil and even worse personal resources, so it was no wonder meth production was embraced as a life-changing profit center that had the illegal potential to change their lives for the better. Their poor lives before meth had a certain dignity in the hard struggle for survival in an uncaring world that had passed them by or never allowed them to catch up, either or both, but cheap and dangerous drug production leading to fast but risky money took these unfortunates down a road that surely few would have chosen if they had a chance beforehand to see any of the personal and social harm it created in a society already at great risk of decent survival. What great harm it did was shown and acted brilliantly, as it pushed these already at-risk people lower down the chain of life than before and surely even lower than the wild animals they had to kill for food.

A young girl of 17, seeming older than her years, beaten up and beaten down, wary of those around her but needing their help, and with 2 young siblings and a helpless mother to care for, she learned that her drug-making, drugged-out father disappeared and missed a court date for a drug arrest, and the most important task of her life then became finding her father before they lost their meager home to bondsmen, as that sorry home place was all they had in the world but it was home and she intended with all her heart and soul to do whatever it took to keep it and her family together. The acting throughout was appropriately serious to deadly, with hardly even a smile to be seen, and left us thankful as seldom before for whatever our own lives give us compared to those in the story.

Such a grim and foreboding task the daughter had, with imminent harm threatening around every corner she turned and behind every door on which she knocked, even those of relatives. Determination can get you far, but only so far unless you get a few breaks, and that long quest for a decent break was what kept viewer’s eyes glued to the screen until it all played out in the end as could be expected in that dire situation.

Bleak, stark, harsh, mean, cruel…all those tough adjectives were present in full force throughout her search, but present also was her eternal fire of human spirit and family duty that would never quit. When actual survival is at stake, this story showed well that some of us truly can find the right stuff to survive when no better choices are possible.

Review By: bobbobwhite
A rich, satisfying film
It is quite astonishing what people are capable of when their survival or way of life is threatened. In those moments, they are somehow able to employ a level of courage, perseverance, and high intention that they never knew they had. Such is the case for young Ree Dolly (Jennifer Lawrence) in Debra Granik’s The Winter’s Bone, winner of the Jury Prize for dramatic competition as well as the Waldo Salt Screen writing Award at the Sundance Film Festival. Newcomer Lawrence, a Kentucky native, is completely convincing as the 17-year-old Ree who has endured much in her brief lifetime and has plenty of obstacles yet to overcome. Living in poverty in a small house in the rural Missouri Ozarks, near the Arkansas border, she has to cook, chop wood and do whatever is necessary to care for her twelve-year old brother Sonny (Isaiah Stone) and her six-year old sister Ashlee (Ashlee Thompson) as well as look after her mother who is catatonic.

Based on the novel by Daniel Woodrell and co-written by Granik and Anne Rosellini, The Winter’s Bone depicts how young Ree’s life is changed when the local sheriff informs her that her dad, Jessup, on the run after being arrested for “cooking” methamphetamines, has put the family’s house up as bond and that, unless he is found and convinced to turn himself in, Ree’s family will lose their house. Insisting to the sheriff that she will find him, the young girl begins a search among friends, family members, distant relatives, and the community of small-time crooks, dope dealers, and kingpins that dominate the male-dominated rural society. No one wants to talk and Ree is met with silence, hostility, and even violence. One neighbor tells her that her questioning is, “a real good way to end up et by hogs.” When someone asks her, “Ain’t you got no men folk to do this?” the answer is an emphatic “no.” (at times, the film seems to be challenging Juno for the most quirky one-liners).

Ree’s main antagonists are her father’s terrifying older brother Teardrop, played by John Hawkes, and Merab (Dale Dickey), the wife of Thump Milton, one of the local bosses. The performance by Dickey conveys an overbearing sense of intimidation that is both real and frightening. As Ree navigates through this hostile environment, we grow to admire her determination and her willingness to confront danger in order to protect her siblings. Winter’s Bone is a film about poverty and desperation but it never exploits its characters or engages in manipulation or sentimentality. Though it can be hard to watch at times, it is not as some critics have said “poverty porn.” There are lighter moments as well that include authentic Ozark folk music sung by Marideth Sisco and scenes of Ree teaching her brother and sister to spell, count, and perhaps more important for survival, how to shoot a rifle. She also tells her younger brother about the culture in which they live saying “Never ask for what ought to be offered.”

Though I was riveted by the unfolding story, perhaps because of the film’s high degree of stylization, I stopped short of full emotional involvement and was often conscious of the fact that I was watching a movie. Yet The Winter’s Bone is a rich, satisfying film that more than deserves the accolades it has been receiving. Though it is stylized, it has an authenticity derived from using local residents as actors and from the director having immersed herself in the culture for two years before shooting the film. Jennifer Lawrence conveys a stoic and hard-edged individual, yet one with integrity who has somehow avoided getting sucked into the soul destructive way of life that seems to be endemic to the area. In Ree, Granik has created one of the strongest female characters in cinema in memory, one who, by her sheer will, suggests what could be accomplished if all of us could live each day as if our life depended on it.

Review By: howard.schumann

Other Information:

Original Title Winter’s Bone
Release Date 2010-06-11
Release Year 2010

Original Language en
Runtime 1 hr 40 min (100 min)
Budget 2000000
Revenue 13831503
Status Released
Rated R
Genre Drama, Mystery
Director Debra Granik
Writer Debra Granik, Anne Rosellini, Daniel Woodrell
Actors Jennifer Lawrence, John Hawkes, Garret Dillahunt
Country United States
Awards Nominated for 4 Oscars. 63 wins & 131 nominations total
Production Company N/A
Website N/A


Technical Information:

Sound Mix Dolby Digital
Aspect Ratio 1.85 : 1
Camera Red One Camera, Zeiss Master Prime and Angenieux Optimo Lenses
Laboratory Final Frame, New York (NY), USA (dailies), Technicolor, New York (NY), USA (digital intermediate)
Film Length 2,646 m (Spain), 2,760 m (Portugal, 35 mm)
Negative Format Redcode RAW
Cinematographic Process Digital Intermediate (2K) (master format), Redcode RAW (4K) (source format)
Printed Film Format 35 mm (spherical) (Kodak Vision 2383, Vision Premier 2393), D-Cinema

Winter’s Bone 2010 123movies
Winter’s Bone 2010 123movies
Winter’s Bone 2010 123movies
Winter’s Bone 2010 123movies
Winter’s Bone 2010 123movies
Winter’s Bone 2010 123movies
Winter’s Bone 2010 123movies
Winter’s Bone 2010 123movies
Winter’s Bone 2010 123movies
Original title Winter's Bone
TMDb Rating 6.805 1,484 votes

Similar titles

Vinegar Hill 2005 123movies
How to Steal a Dog 2014 123movies
Red Static 2021 123movies
Stopped on Track 2011 123movies
Matthias & Maxime 2019 123movies
Camp Nowhere 1994 123movies
Mutiny on the Bounty 1962 123movies
Four Shades of Brown 2004 123movies
Infidelity 2018 123movies
McBain 1991 123movies
Poms 2019 123movies
Ken Park 2002 123movies