
Rich Hill intimately chronicles the turbulent lives of three boys living in an impoverished Midwestern town and the fragile family bonds that sustain them.... (Full plot summary below)
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Rich Hill intimately chronicles the turbulent lives of three boys living in an impoverished Midwestern town and the fragile family bonds that sustain them.
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| New York Magazine/VultureDavid EdelsteinThis vital documentary gives you a world of hurt, prescribes nothing, and calls the ultimate questions you can ask as an American. |
| Washington PostMichael O'SullivanRich Hill doesn’t just make you feel like you know these boys; it makes you care about them. |
| RogerEbert.comGodfrey CheshireIt emerges as an artistic statement as multi-faceted, nuanced and hauntingly original as any of its fictional counterparts. |
| Cinemalogue.comTodd JorgensonWe root for them to find hope for the future under the most difficult of circumstances, and worry that there are many more kids just like them. |
| Willamette WeekMichael NordineMade with the slickness of Clint Eastwood's 'It's Halftime in America' commercial and about as substantive. |
| Toronto StarLinda BarnardThe spare, haunting score and intimate use of the camera brings us directly into the desperate lives of a country's poorest people, struggling to find even occasional pride and sense of belonging. |
| East Bay ExpressKelly VanceApproach to social problems is cool but sympathetic. |
| Los Angeles TimesMartin TsaiRather than putting us in the shoes of the poor, "Rich Hill" merely lets filmmakers and art-house patrons pat themselves on the back for watching the lyrical misfortunes of others. |
| Movie MezzanineDan SchindelA wonderful look at pubescent melancholy and rural living. |
| Boston GlobeTy BurrRich Hill might fairly be called “Boyhood: The Documentary,” and, not surprisingly, it offers a reality harsher than — if just as compassionate as — Richard Linklater’s dreamy time-lapse drama. |