Young Ones (2014)
In a future where water is scarce, a farmer defends his land and hopes to rejuvenate his parched soil. However, his daughter's boyfriend schemes to steal the land for himself.
- Jake Paltrow
- Jake Paltrow
Rating: 5.707/10 by 295 users
Alternative Title:
Молодежь - RU
小把戏 - CN
Young ones (jóvenes) - ES
Futuro Sangriento - BO
Bad Land: Road To Fury - GB
Os Mais Jovens - BR
La dernière génération - CA
Noorus - EE
Young Ones - FR
マッド・ガンズ - JP
Young Ones - L'ultima generazione - IT
年轻的一代 - CN
旱地复仇 - CN
Country:
South Africa
United States of America
Ireland
Language:
English
Runtime: 01 hour 40 minutes
Budget: $0
Revenue: $0
Plot Keyword: future, dystopia, rain, love, murder, bandit, alcoholic, drought, rejuvenate, somber, dramatic, gloomy
No pun intended, but this is a really dry drama that assembles a decent enough cast but struggles with a really thin story. Climate change has played havoc with the water supply and so a sort of bartering arrangement has evolved between those who control the piped distribution and those who need to drink! Farmer "Ernest" (Michael Shannon) and his family are still trying to make a go of things amongst an environment of extortion and banditry - but he has one advantage. A machine that can do much of the manual work for them and one that proves useful when it comes to trading for water. Daughter "Mary" (Elle Fanning) has a boyfriend "Clem" (Nicholas Hoult) whom her father neither likes nor trusts, and when an accident occurs on a trip the two men take into the mountains, the young son "Jerome" (Kodi Smit-McPhee) gradually begins to smell a rat. With "Clem" now married to his sister, though, it is tough for "Jerome" to take his revenge. It's all perfectly adequate this in a sort of "Mad Max" light fashion, but there is little by way of characterisation and neither Hoult nor Smit-McPhee have very much to work with as the glaring sun and environmental challenges ram home much more of the message here the any of the writing does. It's adequately enough produced and edited but is really little better than afternoon television fodder that you'll quickly forget - even if you were in it.