A modest drama fueled by Nick Nolte's gutsy lead performance as a disheveled 57-year-old junkyard proprietor who's been as flattened by life as the rusty old cars he crushes.
Off the Black (2006)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:39
Fresh:26
Rotten:13
Average Rating:6.2/10
Consensus: While the story can be dull, Nick Nolte shines.
Synopsis: Veteran actor Nick Nolte puts his explosive personal life behind him for a while, returning to what he does best with OFF THE BLACK. Nolte stars as Ray, a weathered high-school baseball umpire... Veteran actor Nick Nolte puts his explosive personal life behind him for a while, returning to what he does best with OFF THE BLACK. Nolte stars as Ray, a weathered high-school baseball umpire whose life veered off the rails some time ago and shows no sign of getting back on track. Nolte slips into the role with consummate ease, and you can almost smell the alcohol on his breath as Ray drunkenly wheezes through the first half-hour of director James Ponsoldt's inaugural feature. Ray slumps to his lowest ebb one night as some pranksters from the high school vandalize his home, but he manages to catch one of the fleeing boys, Dave (Trevor Morgan), as he tries to escape the scene. Dave cleans up the mess in a bid to escape criminal charges, and the two men strike up an unusual friendship full of deep conversation and endless soul searching; their relationship is further developed as they attend Ray's high-school reunion, with Dave pretending to be his son. Ponsoldt provides a suitably snug small-town backdrop for Nolte and Morgan to work in, and occasionally dips into a pool of impressive supporting players--including Timothy Hutton as Dave's father and Rosemarie DeWitt as Ray's enigmatic friend--to bolster the interaction between the leads. The emotional pasts of Ray and Dave are carefully unraveled, and although the storyline is far from original, Ponsoldt's film is a worthy exercise, thanks to the impressive acting and interplay from Nolte and Morgan. [More]
Starring: Nick Nolte, Trevor Morgan, Timothy Hutton, Noah Fleiss
Starring: Nick Nolte, Trevor Morgan, Timothy Hutton, Noah Fleiss, Sally Kirkland
Director: James Ponsoldt
Director: James Ponsoldt
Screenwriter: James Ponsoldt
Producer: Scott Macauley
Studio: ThinkFilm
Reviews for Off the Black
Off the Black is a small, dry, emotionally loaded short story that has been carried to film like baked fish to a platter.
Nick Nolte delivers an unexpectedly moving turn in Off the Black, James Ponsoldt’s baseball-themed story of regret and redemption.
The beauty of this film lies in its sense of promise. All the characters are in crisis, yet no one completely falls apart.
There's something very right with Off the Black in terms of pure emotion and performance craft.
Playing a cantankerous, beer-swigging human wreck of a man for the umpteenth time, Nolte is very good but very familiar.
The material is awfully familiar, and first-time director James Ponsoldt paces the entire 90 minutes so slowly that you might think he's talking about chess rather than baseball.
"Off the Black" is writer/director James Ponsoldt's first movie...When I found out how young Ponsoldt is, only twenty-six, I was shocked that someone so young could have such insight into, and such empathy for, the existential disquietude of middle age.
Just a simple little "people drama," nothing more, but a very well-crafted and heartfelt one all the same.
We haven't heard much from Nick Nolte since he took that wild 2002 Hawaiian-shirt mug shot. Off the Black proves he's still a great leading actor.
Although Nolte gives a thoroughly masterful performance, one great actor is never enough. Film, like baseball, is a team sport.
It's a touching story of father and son type male bonding...male bonding with Nick Nolte no less...that's bound to find some audience members blubbering by film's end.
Ponsoldt's debut is full of quiet heartache, and effectively establishes a consistent melancholy tone. And Nolte is exceptional.
Sometimes a movie pretends to be more than it is. In this case, it pretends to be good.
Despite some nice touches, this is the sort of too-precious indie film that gives its characters unnecessary quirks (like diabetes) to make them more 'real'.
Off the Black is a modest, bittersweet character study that hits its mark.
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