Popularity: 5 (history)
| Director: | Ron Howard |
|---|---|
| Writer: | J.D. Vance, Vanessa Taylor |
| Staring: |
| An urgent phone call pulls a Yale Law student back to his Ohio hometown, where he reflects on three generations of family history and his own future. | |
| Release Date: | Nov 09, 2020 |
|---|---|
| Director: | Ron Howard |
| Writer: | J.D. Vance, Vanessa Taylor |
| Genres: | Drama |
| Keywords | child abuse, based on novel or book, drug addiction, american dream, ohio, overdose, heroin, kentucky, yale university, drug rehabilitation, hillbilly, based on memoir or autobiography, single mother, teenage boy, law student, grandmother, appalachian, 1990s, appalachian mountains, mother son relationship, traditional family, mother son estrangement, childhood memory, small town life, negative, absurd, hilarious |
| Production Companies | Imagine Entertainment |
| Box Office |
Revenue: $0
Budget: $0 |
| Updates |
Updated: Feb 01, 2025 Entered: Apr 13, 2024 |
| Name | Character |
|---|---|
| Amy Adams | Beverly "Bev" Vance |
| Glenn Close | Bonnie "Mamaw" Vance |
| Gabriel Basso | J.D. Vance |
| Haley Bennett | Lindsay Vance |
| Freida Pinto | Usha Chilukuri |
| Bo Hopkins | Papaw |
| Owen Asztalos | Young J.D. Vance |
| Jesse C. Boyd | Matt |
| Stephen Kunken | Phillip Roseman |
| Keong Sim | Ken |
| Morgan Gao | Travis |
| Ethan Suess | Chris |
| Jono Mitchell | Kevin |
| Bill Kelly | Uncle Pat |
| David Dwyer | Uncle Arch |
| Sarah Hudson | Lori |
| Ted Huckabee | Jimmy (Bev's Brother) |
| Nathan Hesse | Bill (Nurse) |
| Max Barrow | Cousin Nate |
| Sunny Mabrey | Bonnie (Mamaw, 30's) |
| Brett Lorenzini | Jim (Papaw, 30's) |
| Tierney Smith | Young Bev (6 years) |
| Helen LeRoy | Cheryl |
| Kinsley Isla Dillon | Emma |
| Ryan Homchick | Adult Frank McFee |
| Joshua Stenvick | Chip |
| Bill Winkler | Brooks Houghton |
| Chase Anderson | Brett |
| Amy Parrish | Pamela |
| Ed Amatrudo | Rich |
| David de Vries | Hiram Walcott |
| Holly A. Morris | Cocktailer #1 |
| Brandon Hirsch | Cocktailer #2 |
| David Alexander | Server |
| Alexander Baxter | Obsequious Server |
| Steven Reddington | Waiter |
| Angelo Reyes | Wiry Law Partner |
| John Rymer | Stodgy Partner |
| Abigail Rose Cornell | Young Bonnie (Mamaw 13 Years) |
| Lowrey Brown | Adult Louis Zablocki |
| Hunter James Evers | Young J.D. (4 years) |
| Riley McNerney | Dane |
| Zele Avradopoulos | Pool Woman |
| David Jensen | Mr. Selby |
| Skylar Denney | Holler Aunt |
| John Whitley | Young Louis |
| Zac Pullam | Doug |
| Shane Donovan Lewis | Young Frank |
| Mike Senior | Officer #1 |
| William Mark McCullough | Officer #2 |
| Dylan Gage | Kameron |
| Hannah Pniewski | Katrina |
| David Silverman | Doctor |
| Jason Davis | Dr. Newton |
| Joshua Brady | Davis |
| Cory Chapman | Nasty Cashier |
| Tatom Pender | Nurse |
| Cathy Hope | Patient |
| David Atkinson | Ray |
| Adam Murray | Salesperson |
| Dianna Craig | Scared Woman |
| Emery Mae Edgeman | Meghan |
| Rohan Myers | Young Jim (Papaw 16 Years) |
| Matthew Alan Brady | Meals On Wheels Delivery Man |
| Lucy Capri | Young Lori (6 years) |
| Déjá Dee | Sally Coates |
| Daniel R. Hill | Kyle |
| Jordan Trovillion | Arguing Girlfriend |
| Yossie Mulyadi | Secretary at Club |
| Alisa Harris | ICU Nurse #1 |
| Tiger Dawn | ICU Nurse #2 |
| Darla Robinson | Rehab Mother |
| Belinda Keller | Rehab Recepcionist |
| Jessie Faye Shirley | Old Mamaw Blanton |
| Cheryl Howard | Nurse Vivian |
| Tim Abou-Nasr | Law Candidate Tim |
| Leland Thomas Griffin | Curt |
| Drew Emerson Jones | Officer Connor |
| Justin P. Turner | EMT #1 |
| Joshua T. Schneider | EMT #2 |
| Tony Ward | Marine Barber |
| Mara Hall | Dining Hall Manager |
| Tess Malis Kincaid | Jill at Financial Aid Office |
| Chris Charm | Gas Station Attendant |
| Mary Kraft | Intake Receptionist |
| Suehyla El-Attar | Shoe Store Manager |
| Matthew Withers | Study Hall Friend #1 |
| Jessica Miesel | Study Hall Friend #2 |
| Benjamin Rapsas | Study Hall Friend #3 |
| Ethan Levy | Peter (uncredited) |
| Bret Aaron Knower | Middletown Resident (uncredited) |
| John E. Brownlee | Neighbor (uncredited) |
| Jenny McManus | Middletown Resident (uncredited) |
| Name | Job |
|---|---|
| Jessie Gambardella | Makeup Artist |
| Loyd Bateman | Stunts |
| J.D. Vance | Book |
| Hans Zimmer | Original Music Composer |
| Maryse Alberti | Director of Photography |
| Carmen Cuba | Casting |
| David Fleming | Original Music Composer |
| Sean Thigpen | Visual Effects Supervisor |
| Michael A. Martinez | Compositing Artist |
| Steve Dinozzi | Compositing Artist |
| Ron Howard | Director |
| Christian Wood | Visual Effects Supervisor |
| Wes Dorough | Visual Effects Producer |
| Suzanne C. Robertson | Visual Effects Coordinator |
| Chris LeDoux | Visual Effects Producer |
| Eryn Krueger Mekash | Makeup Department Head |
| Riley Flanagan | Additional Second Assistant Director |
| Monique Ganderton | Stunt Coordinator |
| Jess Durham | Stunts |
| Dena Sodano | Stunt Driver |
| Heikki Kossi | Foley Artist |
| Vanessa Taylor | Writer |
| William M. Connor | Post Producer |
| James Wilcox | Editor |
| Molly Hughes | Production Design |
| Virginia B. Johnson | Costume Designer |
| Grant Elder | Sound Designer |
| Shawn D. Bronson | Art Direction |
| Gregory A. Weimerskirch | Supervising Art Director |
| Brad Lucas | Compositing Artist |
| Zachary S. Willis | 3D Artist |
| Joshua Young | Compositing Artist |
| Heather Taylor | Visual Effects Editor |
| Ryan McConnell | Compositing Artist |
| Ben Sumner | Visual Effects |
| Daniel L. Smith | Compositing Artist |
| Jon Balcome | CG Supervisor |
| Nara Smith | Compositing Artist |
| Jessica Chamberlin | Visual Effects Supervisor |
| Duncan Key | Compositing Artist |
| Daniel Dupre | Matte Painter |
| Tanner Bartlett | Compositing Artist |
| Madison Eckler | Visual Effects |
| Gary Blair | Rigging Grip |
| Nolan Jenkins | Rigging Grip |
| Thomas Lappin | Camera Operator |
| Bryan Haines | VFX Artist |
| Jodi Byrne | Makeup Artist |
| Chris Diamantides | Makeup Artist |
| Jason Ervin | Makeup Artist |
| Amber Johnson | Makeup Artist |
| Erica Stewart | Makeup Artist |
| Andrea Vieth | Makeup Artist |
| Sam Carter | Set Dresser |
| Breanne Grover | Set Dresser |
| Aaron Robert Hall | Set Dresser |
| Maxfield Ladish | Set Dresser |
| Natalie LeCompte | Set Dresser |
| LeShae Ann Nash | Set Dresser |
| Cara Price | Set Decoration Buyer |
| Chris Yoo | Assistant Art Director |
| Josh Berger | Supervising Sound Editor, Sound Re-Recording Mixer |
| Robert Hein | Supervising Sound Editor, Sound Re-Recording Mixer |
| Robin Fields | Set Costumer |
| Bob Moore Jr. | Set Costumer |
| Dana Pacheco | Costume Supervisor |
| Hannah Hildebrandt | Art Department Assistant |
| D.J. Phillips | Camera Loader |
| Megan Blake | Graphic Designer |
| Jason Sweers | Graphic Designer |
| Randall Balsmeyer | Title Designer |
| Name | Title |
|---|---|
| Brian Grazer | Producer |
| J.D. Vance | Executive Producer |
| Diana Pokorny | Executive Producer |
| Ron Howard | Producer |
| Julie Oh | Executive Producer |
| Karen Lunder | Producer |
| Organization | Category | Person | |
|---|---|---|---|
| SAG Awards | Best Actress | Amy Adamson | Nominated |
Popularity History
| Year | Month | Avg | Max | Min |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 | 4 | 25 | 40 | 14 |
| 2024 | 5 | 31 | 58 | 18 |
| 2024 | 6 | 24 | 40 | 15 |
| 2024 | 7 | 49 | 74 | 15 |
| 2024 | 8 | 38 | 74 | 23 |
| 2024 | 9 | 25 | 36 | 16 |
| 2024 | 10 | 32 | 68 | 20 |
| 2024 | 11 | 26 | 39 | 19 |
| 2024 | 12 | 19 | 36 | 12 |
| 2025 | 1 | 25 | 48 | 14 |
| 2025 | 2 | 17 | 31 | 3 |
| 2025 | 3 | 7 | 23 | 1 |
| 2025 | 4 | 4 | 8 | 2 |
| 2025 | 5 | 3 | 8 | 2 |
| 2025 | 6 | 3 | 5 | 2 |
| 2025 | 7 | 2 | 3 | 1 |
| 2025 | 8 | 2 | 2 | 1 |
| 2025 | 9 | 3 | 4 | 2 |
| 2025 | 10 | 3 | 5 | 2 |
Trending Position
| Year | Month | High | Avg |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 | 8 | 964 | 975 |
If you enjoy reading my Spoiler-Free reviews, please follow my blog @ https://www.msbreviews.com This film is based on a memoir of the same title written by J.D. Vance, the man who gives name to the main character or, in better words, the character whose point of view is what the movie describes ... . As I always do, my preparation for any film means I don't watch trailers nor try to know too much about the story. I knew this movie was based on a supposedly true story or in some sort of book, and I knew that this could very well be an Oscar-bait due to the talented cast and late date of release. That's it. I had no idea about its political background nor Vance's personal statements. I'm from Portugal, so I don't live in a Republicans vs. Democrats or a Red vs. Blue country. Politics is and always will be an extremely irrelevant, depressing, unimpactful topic in my life. I don't live in the USA, so unless the controversies surrounding films are global problems, I couldn't care less about them. To me, Hillbilly Elegy looked like another family melodrama featuring lousy parenting, drug addiction, bullying, discrimination, and all those formulaic plot points developed in this type of movie. Expectations-wise, I couldn't avoid the first (tremendously negative) reactions from fellow critics on social media, so I prepared myself for the worst. However, there's a reason why I wrote this prologue above, explaining my origins and what I consider to be important in my personal life... Not trying to justify other people's opinions (everyone has their own right to love/hate any film for whatever reasons they choose to), but it feels awfully clear to me that a lot of American critics were influenced by the real-life J.D. Vance, his memoir, and what some people interpreted about his point of view. I repeat: everyone is in their own right to hate this movie (it has more than enough reasons to, and I'll get to those), but I find "the worst film of the year" statement as exaggerated as the movie's overdramatic sequences. My biggest issues with Hillbilly Elegy concern its editing choices and its looping narrative structure, besides its generic developments of known cliches. Starting with the first problem, Ron Howard (Solo: A Star Wars Story) should have managed to create a really great film from the original story. At its best, Hillbilly Elegy could have been a heartbreaking account about the emotional struggles of living in such a violent, problematic family and about trying to escape this harsh lifestyle and reaching a better life overall. However, the constant flashbacks to J.D.'s young life damage the viewer's connection to the character and the rest of his family members, especially his mom, Bev. The non-stop back-and-forward in the timeline breaks the movie's pacing (James D. Wilcox's editing lacks consistency and coherence) and leads me to my next issue. The entire film is a cycle of dramatic scenes quickly escalating to unbelievable actions. From the repetitive drug abuse and consequent relapses to the horrible parenting displayed in the most random of fashions (in one minute everything's fine, in the next one, chaos ensues), Vanessa Taylor couldn't break her screenplay loop, and Ron Howard failed to realize these sequences in a distinguished manner. In addition to all of this, Hillbilly Elegy also does very little to avoid the common formulas regarding this type of narrative, possessing zero surprises throughout the entire runtime, ultimately being entirely predictable practically from the beginning. Nevertheless, as I mentioned before, this is far from being a contender for the worst piece of cinema in 2020. In fact, it might even get some nominations in the awards season, including the Oscars. As usual with "real-life stories", their cinematic adaptations always fill the end credits with images or videos of the real people portrayed in the movie. It's easy to notice the impressive work made by the make-up department. Glenn Close looks incredibly similar to the real Mamaw, and her charismatic portrayal is definitely getting her some nominations, at least in other ceremonies besides the main ones. She delivers yet another emotionally compelling performance, packed with powerfully handled dialogues, detailed expressiveness, and a phenomenal physical display. Amy Adams (Justice League) doesn't fall behind. If Glenn Close has chances as a supporting role, Amy Adams might receive a few Best Actress nominations. Her character, Bev, doesn't receive a fair treatment script-wise, but Adams tries her best to compensate for that flaw. Her performance might be considered extremely over-the-top for many viewers, and I do acknowledge some exaggeration in a couple of scenes, but overall, she delivers a superb interpretation. Gabriel Basso is also pretty great as J.D. (as is Owen Asztalos), same for Haley Bennett (The Devil All the Time) as Lindsay. Hans Zimmer and David Fleming's score is sweet, but it doesn't get too many moments to shine. In the end, Hillbilly Elegy suffers from its formulaic narrative stuck in a tiresome loop of overdramatic scenes that escalated incomprehensibly way too fast. The predictable melodrama features questionable editing decisions that hurt the film's pacing and overall story consistency, as well as the viewer's emotional bond with the characters. Ron Howard and Vanessa Taylor fail to depict an interesting premise in a distinctly captivating manner, consequently resorting to the award-worthy performances of Amy Adams and Glenn Close to save the whole movie from total disaster. In addition to the outstanding displays from the two actresses, the remarkable performances from the remaining cast elevate the flawed screenplay, ultimately delivering a few scenes worth hanging on to. Technically, impressively accurate make-up (guaranteed awards buzz) and a lovely score deserve a much better film. I still recommend it to everyone who enjoys melodramatic family stories, but don't expect anything remotely special. Rating: C+
Interesting and hearty story, which helps <em>'Hillbilly Elegy'</em> overcome the fact it probably isn't that great a film as a whole. I enjoyed watching the cast. Gabriel Basso gives a good performance in the role of J. D. Vance, though is outshone by Owen Asztalos; who plays the younger version ... of Vance. Elsewhere, star names Amy Adams and Glenn Close support strongly. Freida Pinto is even involved, albeit in a minor and largely unimportant part. I don't love the way the story is told, or some of the elements it tries to force through. I did find myself caring for the lead character though, as well as feeling suitably invested in seeing the plot unfold. There's a nice score in there, also. I'd say it's a good film, nothing more or less.
This is another entry in the wrenching genre of Oprah book club family dysfunction fare. The dysfunction extends through two generations here, plenty of material to mine for lousy parenting and distressing reality show-worthy bad behavior. It is well done I suppose, as you would expect from Ron H ... oward, but I confess I have a low threshold for this genre and had to force myself to finish it. One bright light was that at least the brother and sister were there fir each other and counterbalanced the antics of Mom and Mamaw. They show the real people at the end of the film, and I was intrigued by how close they tried to have the actors resemble them. But of course the home movies shown were all of positive moments in the family, as filming life’s awful moments blossomed much later with YouTube. So these cheerful videos acted to gloss over the pain and dysfunction the movie had worked so meticulously to represent throughout the two hour film.
"You don't know shit" is a hilarious quote by the grandmother to a young JD Vance. I had to laugh throughout the film at her portrayal, she seemed like a wild character with wilder makeup and costuming. But then I was humbled when I saw the true images of JD Vance's family at the end -- they absolut ... ely nailed her visually. Not necessarily the 'best' watch but definitely a fun one, and with Vance as a VP I feel like it is necessary. Talk about great PR.