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Pope Dreams (2006) Online

Pope Dreams (2006) Online
Original Title :
Pope Dreams
Genre :
Movie / Drama
Year :
2006
Directror :
Patrick Hogan
Cast :
Phillip Vaden,Marnette Patterson,Julie Hagerty
Writer :
Patrick Hogan
Budget :
$750,000
Type :
Movie
Time :
1h 45min
Rating :
6.9/10

A young boy tries to make his dying mother's dream come true while navigating through his love life.

Pope Dreams (2006) Online

In the vein of Good Will Hunting and Garden State, POPE DREAMS is a coming of age tale about a young man at a crossroads in life. Filled with heart, music, life, and loss. And a set of drums. Oh, and the Pope. POPE DREAMS is about a directionless nineteen-year old boy, Andy Venable, who works for his hard-case dad in a store warehouse during the day and plays drums in a loud heavy-metal band at night. His only clear goal at the moment is to get his sick mother, a devout Catholic, to meet the Pope before she dies. While he's busy with that, he falls for a girl who's totally out of his league and gets discovered by two Broadway producers for a musical talent that just might be his true calling. Andy's a dreamer. But dreaming is easy. It's reality that's hard.
Credited cast:
Phillip Vaden Phillip Vaden - Andy Venable
Marnette Patterson Marnette Patterson - Brady Rossman
Julie Hagerty Julie Hagerty - Kristina Venable
Stephen Tobolowsky Stephen Tobolowsky - Carl Venable
Noel Fisher Noel Fisher - Pete
Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
Samantha Anderson Samantha Anderson - Heather
Casey Barclay Casey Barclay - Eric
Jordan Belfi Jordan Belfi - Lucas Bowman
Naleah Dey Naleah Dey - Juanita Steinberg
Michael Edwin Michael Edwin - Case Officer
Chris Foreman Chris Foreman - Zane
Rif Hutton Rif Hutton - Riff Malloy (as Riff Hutton)
Barbara Lettieri Barbara Lettieri - Italian Phone Operator (voice)
Steve Loh Steve Loh - Paramedic
Albert-James Motil Albert-James Motil - Priest

The video that Andy and Brady watch on their first date Not Too Tart, Not Too Sweet (2003) is an earlier film made by Producer Steve Loh.


User reviews

Huston

Huston

Saw this film at the USA Film Festival in Dallas. It's a very well developed script, with believable characters, behaving in natural ways. In other words, it's an interesting story that's easy and enjoyable to watch. What more could one ask for in a world filled with mediocre writing, poorly directed and acted? The film has a terrific cast of newcomers and veterans, and is technically well made. The title can be a little misleading. It only refers to the fact the the son wants to send his ailing mom on a trip to Italy to see The Pope in-person. This is by no means a "religious" film. It's currently playing the festival circuit.I highly recommend it. Go see it, if it's showing near you...
Corgustari

Corgustari

I was lucky enough to have seen this film at the Atlanta film festival this week, where members of the cast and crew stayed for a QA session. It's rare in this day and age to find a film that conjures tears without being cliché. It's also rare to see a portrait of male friendships that is so real, accurate and touching. No matter your age, orientation, family situation, gender- this film is sure to strike a chord within you. The main protagonist- a 23 year old from Lubbock- is an actor to watch. Film festival goers, this film has just started it's circuit. Buy tickets and enjoy- I hope this makes it into festivals like Toronto.
Runemane

Runemane

I saw this last night at the FAIF Film Festival in Los Angeles and thoroughly enjoyed it. I went to the theater not expecting to be so impressed and not knowing what I was going to see. The title is a little cheesy, although appropriate. The characters were lovable and believable. I haven't been so choked up at a movie in a LONG time. There were also great performances from relatively inexperienced actors, and some very cute/funny moments. All in all I would recommend it; if it is available I would like to purchase it. And I really hope it makes it to wide release! (As a side not I was sitting next to the main character and didn't even know until the lights cam up afterward
Unereel

Unereel

The charming "Pope Dreams" was one my favorites at last week's Atlanta Film Festival. I set aside my cynicism and my adult aversion to being emotionally manipulated by a plot-by-the-numbers script when I realized that this was going to be a straight-up coming-of-age movie. Besides, it's the wonderful acting that makes "Pope Dreams" stand out in a film festival setting, which tends to show more ironically wised-up characters. Although, with a title like "Pope Dreams", I figured this film would be ironic. Instead, this was a really generous-spirited adolescent movie about social class and love and family and music.

I did find the title a bit off the beam,however, since,in this cut, anyway, the Papal pilgrimage subplot is quite incidental to the story. One of the film's best bits of dialog is a musically misunderstood reference to "Early Sabbath". I thought - "that's makes a great title!" - to myself as I was watching....
Thabel

Thabel

I just saw this film on Lifetime and it was titled "Music for My Mother." No matter what the title, this is a very impressive movie detailing a sensitive guy who loves music and is masterful at creating it.

A very good film detailing human relations among people. When a young lady can't get permission from her college professor father to go to Florida with her boyfriend, she resorts to chicanery to win her father over. She purposely goes out with a "lowlife" so that her father will give in and be happy that she is back with her regular guy. Of course, the idea is that the "lowlife" turns out to be our musical genius who soon impresses her dad with his uncanny ability to write beautiful music.

This is also a story of sadness as the young man's mother is terminally ill with cancer. Julie Hagerty is impressive in the latter role.

While the ending is sad, you will be uplifted by the music and that life goes on. A wonderful tribute to life even with its tribulations.
Rocksmith

Rocksmith

POPE DREAMS (2006) *** Phillip Aden, Marne Patterson, Stephen Tobolowsky, Julie Haggerty, David Shatraw, Noel Fisher, Naleah Dey. (Dir: P. Patrick Hogan)

The teenager in love but facing life lessons has been around for decades and best embodied during the 1980s with John Hughes and John Cusack, director and actor who best caught the voice of a generation - hell, my generation - about the nice-funny-guy who never really got the girl who wants the girl but along the way grows up into the mature adult everyone can already see. Recently Zach Braff's out-of-nowhere comedy/drama "Garden State" became "The Graduate" for Generation X, Y & Z and now comes an indie dramedy with a cast of virtually unknowns but manages to be winning, funny and surprisingly poignantly moving.

Newcomer Phillip Aden stars as the Cascadian character Andy Venable, a decent kid who loves music and is the drummer of his band who are quite frankly beneath his talents. When he's not busy working with his father Carl (veteran character actor Stephen Tobolowsky, best known as Needlenose Ned of "Groundhog Day" and Sammy Jankis, the template for Guy Pearce's anti-hero in "Memento") at his audio/video retail outlet, he is dreaming of something better from his blah-sville existence in sun-dappled LA.

Just when he can't figure out his life enters a beautiful blonde named Brady Rossman (hottie Marne Patterson), a Stanford sophomore whose boyfriend in San Diego but attempting to see her for a trip to Key West much to the chagrin of her father, Joel (David Shatraw), a musical composer, who denies her wishes. Determined to get her way and with the aid of her best friend, Juanita (Naleah Dey) the two girls hatch a plan: have Brady find some loser to date to infuriate her father just for spite and then dump him when he caves in for the vacation getaway.

The girls find their patsy in the unknowing form of Andy when they see his band perform at the local bar and after she introduces herself and asks him out, Andy is smitten.

Andy's got other problems too. His beloved mother, Kristina (Julie Hagerty, giving a career high performance) has a rare form of cancer and a short-time longevity that Andy cannot deal with despite the insistence by his father and his sisters to help them help her in her hour of need. It is too much for Andy who is also attempting to raise money so he can take Kristina to the Vatican for a personal visit arrangement to meet The Pope.

Written and directed by P. Patrick Hogan (who makes a fine directorial debut here), a veteran sound editor, has a good eye and ear for dialogue in his witty, touching and earnestly adult screenplay capturing the voice of adolescent angst and the mature subject matter of death with an able hand. I can't recall a film that has accurately depicted the suffering of cancer victims with such delicacy and decency largely thanks to the impressive acting by Hagerty in her smallish yet important role. All around the acting is on par with the production in itself. Vaden - who resembles a cross between Cusack, Matthew Broderick and Bud Cort in his "Harold and Maude" hey-day - is remarkable and adept with the sly comedy and sudden drama as well as Patterson who makes her Brady a likable babe who clearly has feelings for Andy and cannot understand how her initial plan has instead given her a new relationship with the decent-hearted would-be beau; she shines in several scenes where you can see her character despising her initial plotting. Also noteworthy is Noel Fisher's soccer-obsessed Pete "Pelando" Frazier, the goofy best bud of Andy who also is surprising in a few scenes of drama where he isn't who he appears to be. Fisher recalls the younger Anthony Michael Hall with a touch of David Spade's curdled wit.

I was pleasantly surprised with this film and enjoyed it thoroughly and it was nice to see veterans like Tobolowsky (in arguably his best work ever) and Haggerty (ditto) make it effortless with newbies Vaden and Patterson.
Mogelv

Mogelv

was lucky enough to see this film at the Newport Beach Film Festival, and I have to say that it was one of the best films I saw there this year. A good 'coming-of-age' film is hard to write, I think, because the conventions of storytelling lend themselves to practices which aren't reflected in our own life experiences. For example, it's tempting as a writer to tell a story where everything works out okay in the end, where all the loose ends are tied up in the places we would expect, or want, them to be. I think one of the things I liked the most about this movie was the fact that it didn't try to reconcile the irreconcilable, instead it gave us characters and situations we could actually care about because they reflect, at least a little, some part of ourselves. The resolutions in this film run the gamut from heartbreaking to happy, but none of them felt contrived or insincere.

I'm a very tough critic of films, especially independent ones, because I've seen so many. I've been to too many film festivals, and more often than not I find myself distracted by the technical shortcomings of low-to-no-budget film-making. I'll be frank and say that this film was not technically flawless –in retrospect there were a few things that I felt took away from the film. Having said that, the aspects of the movie that were good were good enough to make me look past the film's shortcomings. It got the right things right: characters I liked and believed, a story that was satisfying, and an underlying message that didn't feel trite.

If I could change anything about the movie, I would change the title. Based on the title "Pope Dreams" alone I would (and did!) make any number of assumptions about the film that aren't true. The title doesn't reflect the seriousness or gravity of the film, and it doesn't do justice to the comedy or humor either. This movie is better than its title suggests. The themes of the movie are powerful, and the title should reflect them. Ultimately the title of the film doesn't really make it better or worse, but it does do a great deal in terms of making the movie more accessible and marketable. I wouldn't be making a suggestion like this unless I really felt it would help bring more people to the audience, because I'd love to see more people check this movie out.

Congratulations to the filmmakers, you've done a wonderful job and I was thoroughly entertained. A focus on story and character is what independent film-making is all about – I'm glad to see that someone remembered that.
Faehn

Faehn

Hogan crafts a sweet, yet also appropriately sad, tale of late teen desire. The principal actors work well together, with believable dialogue and tenable situations. The characters could have been stereotyped and overemotional, but Hogan and the ensemble infused them with enough sensitivity and humor to allow the pathos to appear naturally.

All five of the main characters were firmly defined, and the actors performed with distinction, especially Vaden (Andy) and Patterson (Brady) They made their characters believable. A couple of the side characters were a bit cartoonish (the lyricist partner and Brady's boyfriend come to mind) but for the most part they supplemented the storyline without calling attention to themselves. On the plus side, the characters of the bar owner and Brady's girlfriend were very enjoyable and even stole their scenes.

This film is recommended. It will probably get a PG-13 for language, but the salty dialogue did not seem superfluous for either the characters or the storyline. I'm not sure precisely who the intended audience will be - much of the humor seems aimed at 30 to 50 year olds looking back at being teenagers, rather than current teens - but it seems reasonable that it will appeal across a broad spectrum. A solid first effort for both director/ writer Hogan and producer Loh.
LiTTLe_NiGGa_in_THE_СribE

LiTTLe_NiGGa_in_THE_СribE

to be truthful, i only watched this film because Marnette Patterson was in it. i was pleased to find out it was really quite a good film.

the film was sweet without being too syrupy or cloying and nicely directed and well acted. Marnette Patterson is always good, and it's nice to see her when she isn't being terrorized by giant bugs or having her eyes burnt out with a cigar by a vengeful ghost(i liked both those movies), the lead actor is believable and likable as was most of the cast. the main stand out here was Julie Hagerty as the dieing mother. the dieing martyr role can so often be over played to the point of embarrassing cliché, but Hagerty is believable emotionally and physically. she truly looks and behaves like she is genuinely sick. she's dieing from cancer caused by asbestos poisoning, which reminds us all that there are many other factors harmful to our health than just cigarettes.

a really nice film and a good film for young people that isn't surrounded by a lot of hype. sort of an 'Napoleon Dynamite', except that it's more of a serious drama rather than laugh out loud comedy.