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poster of Blow the Man Down
Rating: 6.214/10 by 297 users

Blow the Man Down (2019)

While grieving for the loss of their mother, the Connolly sisters suddenly find they have a crime to cover up, leading them deep into the underbelly of their salty Maine fishing village.

Directing:
  • Bridget Savage Cole
  • Danielle Krudy
  • Michael Kefeyalew
  • Laura Klein
  • Kat Hess
  • Maggie Ambrose
Writing:
  • Bridget Savage Cole
  • Danielle Krudy
  • Daniel Sweren-Becker
Stars:
Release Date: Fri, Apr 26, 2019

Rating: 6.214/10 by 297 users

Alternative Title:
Buttiamo giù l'uomo - IT
Temné hlubiny - CZ
ブロー・ザ・マン・ダウン~女たちの協定~ - JP
ブロー・ザ・マン・ダウン-女たちの協定- - JP
ブロー・ザ・マン・ダウン~女たちの協定 - - JP

Country:
United States of America
Language:
English
Runtime: 01 hour 30 minutes
Budget: $0
Revenue: $0

Plot Keyword: small town, prostitute, sister, cover-up, murder, maine, disposing of a dead body, whorehouse, sister sister relationship

Morgan Saylor
Mary Beth Connolly
Sophie Lowe
Priscilla Connolly
Margo Martindale
Enid Nora Devlin
June Squibb
Susie Gallagher
Annette O'Toole
Gail Maguire
Marceline Hugot
Doreen Burke
Will Brittain
Officer Justin Brennan
Skipp Sudduth
Officer Coletti
David Coffin
Singing Fishman
David Pridemore
Singing Fishman
Adam Wolf Mayerson
Singing Fisherman
Mark S. Cartier
Singing Fisherman
Linda Shary
Mary Margaret Connolly
Neil Odoms
Bob Gallagher
Kendrey Rodriguez
Beauty Shop Girl
Thomas Kee
Declan Crawley

Peter McGinn

I was led to watch this on the recommendation of a couple friends. They liked it and mentioned it was set in our home state of Maine. I guess I wasn’t as impressed with it as much as they were, for I only finished watching it because of that recommendation and the Maine connection. I write novels, so I suppose plotting matters to me for that reason, and I had some difficulty from nearly the beginning here. When you have two cops in this small town investigating a crime energetically (at least by one of them — the other was a little more folksy about it), it doesn’t quite wash with me that the same police would turn a blind eye to a house of prostitution for decades. And there is vagueness here: vague threats, mysterious references to the past, motivations are hinted at but not defined. It reminds me of a Bob Dylan song, whose lyrics often reveal more by the details he leaves out. But that works better with a five-minute song than with a 90 minute movie. Anyway, it doesn’t seem like it wouldn’t have taken much to greatly improve the film. If you are looking for mood and a distraction while doing g something else like — I dondon’t know, housework or phone texting or internet surfing, the movie might intrigue you, but less so if you sit down with popcorn and really dig into the logic and the complexities of the story.


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