Weirdos

2016

Action / Drama

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Top cast

Molly Parker Photo
Molly Parker as Laura
Steven McChattie Photo
Steven McChattie as Priest
Jonathan Torrens Photo
Jonathan Torrens as Torso of American Man
Allan Hawco Photo
Allan Hawco as Dave
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
775.67 MB
1280*534
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 24 min
P/S ...
1.41 GB
1920*800
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 24 min
P/S ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by maurice_yacowar7 / 10

Gay teen flees to free-spirited mother.

In 1976 Nova Scotia Canadians watch TV coverage of the US's Bicentennial Celebrations. "It's not you," the Canadian teens are admonished by the Cambodian landlord whose back bears the scars of the Khmer Rouge oppression. The kids know nothing about that outside world. They're confused enough about themselves and their puzzling physical and psychological changes.

There's something of a hollowness to that American flash of patriotism, however, even in the 1976 setting. All the Presidents Men, the Nixon exposure, is running in the Sydney movie house. Meanwhile, Antigonish gets Mother Jugs and Speed.

But that's not why Kit and his friend Alice fib to their respective parents and hitch-hike to Sydney. Kit wants to go live with his mother, mistaking her lunch invitation for an offer to move in. Alice wants to seduce him in hopes he won't move away.

Kit is abetted by the spirit of Andy Warhol, who embodies and endorses the weirdness that ennobles the human species. There are several "weirdos" here. A boy trying to seduce Kit backs away when Alice approaches; the boy calls Kit a weirdo. The high schoolers in the car and at the beach party play at being wild and weird. The old drunk who tries to steal the cop car is an unrepentant weirdo from earlier time, still crazy after all those years.

So are our heroes' parents, all apparently old hippies. Alice's father is a drunk who's trying to inveigle himself back into her mother's graces and bed. Kit's dad Dave is a social studies teacher declared cool by the skylarking teens. But Kit overheard him refer to the French teacher as a "fag." As he's trying to come to terms with this own homosexuality, Kit decides to go live with his freer-spirited mother.

When he finds her dissolved into looniness he has to call dad to come get him. Once Dave hears his son's concern he apologizes for his insensitivity and by implication suggests a family life that will be as warm and cozy as those delicious views of Nova Scotia. The film closes on inter-generational comfort, Alice and Kit together as platonic friends and Dave and his mother dancing to Country & Western.

The title refers equally to the adolescent issues of the teenagers and the scars still worn by the survivors of the freedoms of the '60s. The latter is a psychological contrast to the Cambodian's physical marks. Here it's not the sins but the spirit of freedom that passes from the parents to the children, the fertile weirdness of Warhol. It carries its own costs.

Reviewed by joedoherty-423998 / 10

Enjoyable Flick

It was a very good and entertaining movie. I enjoyed the laid back atmosphere and environment of the '70s. Some people may be bored by the film, but it causes you to reflect upon life especially if you were born during the '60s and '70s. Highly recommend it to any movie buff.

Reviewed by owenbland-4410410 / 10

Really good!

I went with some friends and we all really liked it! Some great scenery around Nova Scotia, some scenes that I think we all can relate to that just feel like high school parties. A lot of those scenes you can really feel for the characters, it all felt very real, even the less pleasant stuff. Well worth seeing!

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