
Rusty (Hatosy) starts to pursue a path to a more meaningful life, thanks to his connection to Bob (Goldblum), the boyfriend of his mother, Mary (Lynch). His new take on life causes friction with his best friend, Dallas (Caan), and both men find their friendship pushed to its breaking point, causing them to make life-changing decisions.... (Full plot summary below)
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Rusty (Hatosy) starts to pursue a path to a more meaningful life, thanks to his connection to Bob (Goldblum), the boyfriend of his mother, Mary (Lynch). His new take on life causes friction with his best friend, Dallas (Caan), and both men find their friendship pushed to its breaking point, causing them to make life-changing decisions.
Leave your thoughts about Dallas 362.
| The A.V. ClubScott TobiasFrom the combustible opening-credits sequence, Caan displays a whip-crack sense of timing, pace, and energy that's so rare for a first-time filmmaker that it's tempting to call him a savant. |
| eFilmCritic.comErik ChildressScott Caan has been an enjoyable presence in movies, but his confident eye behind the camera and on the page is even more noteworthy. Dallas 362 is as assured a debut as I've seen on the film festival circuit this year. |
| Austin ChronicleMarjorie BaumgartenThe actor Scott Caan makes a strong debut as a writer-director in this atmospheric character study in which he also co-stars. |
| VarietyScott FoundasHas a relaxed poeticism to it; it's a sweetly naive, adolescent Hemingway fantasy with a star-making performance by Shawn Hatosy and good ones from everyone else (including Caan). |
| The New York TimesLawrence Van GelderMr. Caan's debut film is not quite a whole thing, but it offers up enough promising fragments to make his sophomore effort worth watching for. |
| Shadows on the WallRich ClineWe instantly care about these loveable losers and begin rooting for them to make some wise decisions and break the cycle of violence. |
| Hollywood ReporterFrank ScheckScott Caan, who delivers a derivative but extremely well acted drama. |
| New York PostLou LumenickJeff Goldblum is a hoot as Hatosy's pot-smoking shrink, who also happens to be his mom's boyfriend, but Dallas 362 is basically a road movie that doesn't really go anywhere. |
| NewsdayJohn AndersonCaan shows with his rough-and-tumble character dramedy precisely why actors like to work for actors. |
| New York Daily NewsJack MathewsClearly, Caan's major influence is Quentin Tarantino, though he manages only a weak imitation. But give him credit for casting Kelly Lynch and Jeff Goldblum and letting them go. |