
Max lives in Brooklyn. He enjoys playing soccer, skateboarding, and drinking with his friends at local bars. Last summer he and his girlfriend, Willow, won a free cruise to Jamaica but two days before the trip she dumps him cold. When his friends flake, Max winds up alone on the high seas, navigating the crowds of gray-haired cruisers. Over the course of several days he flirts with the staff photographer, drinks cocktails with the boat's celebrity juggler and has several stra... (Full plot summary below)
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Max lives in Brooklyn. He enjoys playing soccer, skateboarding, and drinking with his friends at local bars. Last summer he and his girlfriend, Willow, won a free cruise to Jamaica but two days before the trip she dumps him cold. When his friends flake, Max winds up alone on the high seas, navigating the crowds of gray-haired cruisers. Over the course of several days he flirts with the staff photographer, drinks cocktails with the boat's celebrity juggler and has several strange encounters with the only other loner.
Leave your thoughts about Wah Do Dem.
| New York TimesJeannette CatsoulisHorizons are expanded and exoticism explored in Wah Do Dem, a shaggy road movie about relinquishing your comforts to find your bliss. |
| Village VoiceAaron HillisMethinks we're meant to actually feel sorry for this overprivileged twerp in neon sunglasses. |
| Daily Mirror (UK)David EdwardsMade for a mere $75,000, the film's a wry portrait of an American out of his environment and out of his depth... |
| ViewLondonMatthew TurnerImpressively directed and nicely observed, this is a scruffily charming indie drama with an engaging central performance from Sean Bones. |
| London Evening StandardDerek MalcolmIt's impossible not to like this small-budget road movie... |
| VarietyRob NelsonSlight but winning and often funny, the scrappy Amerindie Wah Do Dem is a fish-out-of-water comedy driven by Sean "Bones" Sullivan's offbeat performance. |
| Boxoffice MagazineSteve RamosSullivan's easygoing performance as a Brooklyn musician dumped by his girlfriend prior to a planned Jamaican cruise together syncs perfectly with writers/directors Ben Chace and Sam Fleischner's dreamlike storytelling. |
| New York Daily NewsElizabeth WeitzmanThough the mumblecore esthetic is familiar and the movie's ultimate impact slight, the filmmakers do find a fresh and modestly amusing twist by tossing their hipster out of his natural habitat. |
| New York PostV.A. MusettoMusician Bones is believable as the luckless tourist in lime-green shades, and the musical soundtrack, including songs by Bones, is infectious. |
| Hollywood ReporterSheri LindenAs a depiction of youthful resilience, the film works, but Max's trials and tribulations might have had more dramatic impact with a trained actor in the role. |