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  • This movie is done very well and definitely engaging to watch, but perhaps not quite to my taste.

    This is a movie about a tight group of 4 children -- a precocious girl, an overweight boy, and twin brothers, the more out-going who is killed in an accident. The funeral starts the journey of understanding the lives of the remaining 3 -- not only how the family deals with the murdered son/brother, but how the overweight boy deals with his obesity, and how the young girl deals with her mother and absent father.

    The heart of the movie really revolves around these near teenagers, and as a result, the coming-of-age experiences are highlighted. At times, I laughed awkwardly, probably out of embarrassment for one of the characters. Nothing wrong with this -- in fact, it's probably what the director was trying to achieve. I was also pulled into the bizarre logic the brother was going through -- through talks with his parents, and even more poignant, some of the very personal kid-to-kid conversations. The visual clues and the inter-actions to parents were all well chosen to create characters that were believable, 3-dimensional and full of conflict. Kudos to the director and actors on this fine work. In particular, the precocious young girl (Zoe Weizenbaum) was well-cast in a very strong, conflicted and convincing performance.

    Overall -- well done. This is one of the best 'pre-teen-angst' movies I've seen in a long time.
  • This movie touches on a series of issues troubling America today seen thru the eyes of it's youth. The film shows us that problems in areas such as violence, guns, race issues and obesity are no longer limited to adults but play an active part amongst young people as well. The film centers around a group of 12 year old friends and their families. All with different problems which reflect on their parents short comings. The script is very well written and the acting is quite extraordinary throughout the entire film. The only real problem is that the movie feels a little too short, but perhaps it's better to quit while ones ahead. I'd recommend this film to anyone with an interest in human nature and all it's flaws.
  • Michael Cuesta (who previously directed the slick and grotesquely controversial "L.I.E" and is currently one of the masterminds behind Showtime's wildly entertaining and grotesque "Dexter") treads some very dangerous ground with "Twelve and Holding." Working with a solid script focusing on how three best friends cope with the accidental death of another friend (the more popular twin brother of one of the protagonists), he presents pre-adolescent characters with the psychologically complex motives of adults and we witness their pratfalls, tragedies, and heart wrenching moments in a the same type of voyeuristic manner usually reserved for more mature characters and audiences. Elements of classics like "Stand by Me" keep the film grounded even as some of the plot developments get a bit far-fetched.

    The acting is a huge plus here, with Annabella Sciora (getting more and more enchanting and beautiful with age), Jayne Atkinson (brutal, honest, and gut-wrenching as the grieving mother of the dead child), and Connor Donovan (in duel leads as the dead boy and his conflicted twin brother) highlighting the excellent ensemble. Cuesta's surprisingly subtle direction somehow manages to avoid both the salacious tendencies of a Larry Clark film and the annoyingly overt quirkiness of similarly themed films like "Me and You and Everyone we Know" to deliver a profound and perplexing tale of coming-of-age, revenge and loneliness.
  • Nice production, good script, outstanding casting, great young actors and well chosen music makes this a gem. One can complain about some of the extremes of the plot, but forgive the excesses and farcical elements for the sake of a well woven story. It begins with four kids, friends growing up in a middle-class neighborhood. A significant event splits the initial single thread into three, each following a child: the precocious Malee making her first amorous exploration; Leonard and his struggle with obesity, not only his but also of his immediate family; and the conflicted Jacob. While the film would classify as a drama, there is a good deal of humor to counterbalance the tension that is maintained throughout. The editing is superb in how it moves nimbly among the threads, keeping us always interested and curious about what will happen to the characters. The young actors deliver their parts with aplomb which combined with excellent directing should make this a success.
  • One night, I was on the couch, looking through my "TMN on demand" movie selections, movies A-Z. Looking for good movies to watch on the movie network is tough, considering you don't know what ones are good/recommended and what ones you should entirely stay away from. I watched all of the ones that fit my taste, and one night, I decided to view the movie "Twelve and Holding", hardly knowing anything about it. I'm not really a fan of dramas at all, the "Family Channel" Disney, pretty much ruined them for me, with these lame drama-comedy's such as MVP and cheap independent cartoon type ones. I decided to give it a chance, because I wasn't really in the mood for any action or horror or Comedy's like I usually was. As soon as it passed the dramatic scenes about a brother tragically loosing his life to a Molotov cocktail, I was absorbed into the fascinating character study and couldn't wait to see what happened next in the tale. Many characters with completely different problems are examined in this story, and it ties together nicely with the main plot. Inspiring and heartbreaking moments with truly remarkable well-acted sequences.

    The actors often seemed way to real, to me, and instead of feeling like a total wordplay, the writing style was original and refreshing. There is a good amount of subplots in this coming-of-age story and they are studied with well-written dialog, awkward or funny moments and significant captivating motivational characters. This movie isn't nearly as highly acclaimed as I proposed it was going to be, only one nomination? No Oscar nominations? Nothing!? Surely it deserves more observation on a critical side. Consideration, understanding, the dealing of problems, and temptations are pretty much the four key aspects this movie is tackling and trying to make the viewer take into consideration, but people aren't giving it a fighting chance. Speaking of characters, five strong characters are highlighted in this film. Jeremy Renner, who plays Gus, a mislead need-no-sympathy pathetic man who tries to be a clean role model to a little girl, Zoe Weizenbaum who happens to be one of the other lead characters, playing Malee. Jesse Camacho playing Leonard, who has to deal with his overweight family, one of the more motivational and inspirational characters of the film. He is also overweight, but actually is the one who is trying to take action and loose weight. Conor Donovan, another powerful actor from the film, plays two characters, himself and his much more unapproachable and risk-taking brother. Two strong roles too fill, and he does the job. This film tops off with one of the most emotionally charged and satisfying endings I've seen in a drama since a long time.

    Highly recommended.

    3/4 Stars
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I saw this film at the 2005 Toronto International Film Festival. Ostensibly about a group of friends, this film tells three separate tales that veer from comedy to tragedy and back again. I'll sketch them in the order of most successful to least.

    Malee lives with her mom and never sees her dad. She's just started her period and begins to develop a very strong crush on a construction worker who is one of her therapist mother's patients. Her attempts at flirting are both painful and very funny to watch. She's obviously missing a father figure, but there's something else stirring as well, and she's lonely and looking for adult attention. Zoe Weizenbaum was just a joy to watch, beautiful and earnest and lovable and willing to take amazing risks for the film. The director told us to watch out for her as "Young Pumpkin" in the upcoming Memories of a Geisha.

    Leonard is an overweight kid from a family where everyone is overweight, and he's tired of being the butt of other people's jokes. After a serious accident in which (bizarrely) he loses his senses of taste and smell, he starts eating healthy food and exercising, and takes radical action to, as he sees it, save his mother's life. Played soulfully by Jesse Camacho, Leonard is never just comic relief, but a hurting little boy who wants to change not only his life, but his family's as well.

    Jacob (Conor Donovan) and Rudy (also played by Conor Donovan) are twin brothers who are very different from each other. Rudy is athletic and fearless, Jacob withdrawn and shy, mostly because of a large birthmark on his face. One night, Rudy and Leonard stay overnight in their treehouse, after bullies threaten to destroy it. Their plan to stay awake and defend it goes horribly wrong when they doze off, and the bullies light it on fire, unaware that anyone is inside. Leonard escapes with relatively minor injuries (but as noted above, the odd side effect that he can no longer smell or taste). But Rudy is killed, and his family is devastated. Jacob is racked with guilt for not being with the others on the night of the fire, but he's also filled with a desire for revenge. After the two perpetrators are sent away to a juvenile facility for a year, Rudy and Jacob's mother expresses her wish that the guilty pair die, a sentiment that Jacob stores away in his heart.

    For a while, Jacob goes to the juvenile facility regularly to threaten the two, telling them that when they get out, he's going to kill them. But after one of the boys commits suicide in custody, Jacob softens and even continues to visit the other boy and bring him comic books. As the boy's release looms, they make a plan to run away together. Jacob is unhappy at home, feeling unwanted due to the arrival of a new adopted child. But his plans lead to even more tragedy.

    If all this sounds melodramatic, it is. And despite the heavy subject matter, at times there was a vaguely "after-school special" feeling about the film. This last story, which in some ways ties the others together, carries the most weight, but is the least successful. I'm not sure why, but it may have something to do with the huge dramatic burden placed on the shoulders of a young actor with little experience. The fact that the film careens through a wide emotional territory like a drunken elephant doesn't help, either.

    In the end, the performances of Camacho and Weizenbaum are so winning that I sort of wish they were in a film of their own. As a story of three kids seeking the love of their parents, the film is only partially successful. I also wish the kids had been in more scenes together, since you don't really get to see why they're friends in the first place.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    12 AND HOLDING is one of those little Indie films that somehow slips through the cracks of public attention and only when it is released on DVD does it surface as brilliant star of a film. Powerfully and sensitively written by Anthony Cipriano and directed with unrelenting intensity and grace by Michael Cuesta, this is a film about youngsters on the brink of adulthood who respond to each other and to events in ways far beyond the scope of most mature adults.

    Identical twins Rudy and Jacob Carges (Conor Donovan in both roles) differ in the fact that Jacob has a facial birthmark and feels second fiddle to his twin Rudy, a quick, tempered lad who eggs on bullies causing the maelstrom that is to follow. Their close friends are Malee Chuang (Zoe Weizenbaum), the daughter of psychologist Dr. Carla Chuang (Annabella Sciorra) who remains bruised by a failed marriage to an abusive husband, and grossly obese Leonard Fisher (Jesse Camacho) whose parents (Marcia DeBonis and Tom McGowan) are equally addicted to junk food. When Rudy challenges two ruffian classmates (Michael Fuchs and Martin Campetta), the trio's tree house is threatened and is burned as a gesture or revenge - but Rudy happened to be inside the tree house and was burned to death. His parents (Linus Roache and Jayne Atkinson) are devastated as is Jacob, now their only son and one who feels he should have been the twin that died. The family wants revenge and is infuriated when the two lads who caused the tragedy are given only one year of detention.

    This event sets off changes in the three friends: Jacob visits the perpetrators in the detention home, unable to see that Rudy's death was an unplanned accident. He threatens the lads and one actually commits suicide in his cell. Jacob gradually becomes friends with the other lad when his security at home is threatened by is parent's adoption of a black son. This new camaraderie results in a plan that leads to a surprising end. In the meanwhile, Leonard's injury in the fire leads to his loss of taste and he sees his obesity, and that of his entire family, as disgusting and commits to changing his life, unable to even forcibly gain the same change from his parents - another surprising end. And Malee's desperate need for a father figure and her starting adolescence leads her to become enchanted by one of her mother's patients, construction worker Gus Maitland (Jeremy Renner in a superb performance) and she attempts to seduce the psychologically damaged Gus without success. The manner in which these three youngsters enter the adult world is more than challenging and the results of their response to entering 'maturity' and to the trauma of the death of Rudy is shattering.

    Cuesta directs these fine actors - there is not a weak one in the cast - with surety and a degree of sense of spontaneity that is truly splendid. This is most assuredly an ensemble performance worthy of awards: it is also a series of star turns for Jeremy Renner, Annabella Sciorra, Conor Donovan, Zoe Weizenbaum and Jesse Camacho. This is independent film-making at its finest: the story is tough, the conclusions disturbing, and the quality of acting is astounding. First Class work. Grady Harp
  • Twelve and Holding (2005) ***1/2

    Twelve and Holding is filled with some of the best performances by young kids as I've seen in a long time. Michael Cuesta directs the film very nicely and the film approaches a difficult subject of how young kids deal with tragedy and death head on. Though the film doesn't rank up there with Come and See, Forbidden Games, or Grave of the Fireflies, this is still a wonderful and delicate addition to that genre. The material in this film could have easily been turned into a nightmarish exploitation picture, but its done just right and focuses intently on the reality of these kids situations.

    Leonard's parents seem to be more caricatures than realistic, and there are some aspects of the screenplay which could have used some fine tuning, but overall Twelve and Holding is a powerful, heartbreaking and tragic film, handled oh so delicately by Cuesta and especially the young actors and some of the adults as well(especially Jeremy "Dags" Renner, who'da thunk it).

    A very nice little film that deserved a much wider audience than it got.

    3.5/4
  • ferguson-615 June 2006
    Warning: Spoilers
    Greetings again from the darkness. Mixing the topic of death and adolescents is always difficult to do in a manner that avoids melodrama and in a manner that truly explores raw emotion among the kids and adults. For the most part, director Michael Cuesta does succeed in crafting a well-made, believable study of "what happens next".

    The challenge he is faced with is actually going a bit too far sometimes with violence, guns, sex and independence. The points are made, but the story lines are just a tad extreme. The film deals with twin brothers - one a born leader, the other a social recluse with a facial birthmark - who are friends with Malee (the daughter of a single psychiatrist mom and Leonard, a quiet obese boy from a family full of champion overeater. Real life begins for all involved when the "popular" brother is accidentally killed. Watching the transformation of the other brother to a strong-willed, slightly angry bull is frightening. However, it is not as frightening as the paths of Malee and Leonard.

    Malee's storyline involves her crush on a MUCH older construction worker played by Jeremy Renner (the bad guy in North Country and Dahmer). Trust me when I tell you that this plot twist will leave you feeling very uncomfortable, but it does ends well. Leonard's line creates the most humor, but it also serves as a sad commentary on the role families play in childhood obesity. Watching Leonard slowly transform himself and family is again a little over the top.

    Some familiar faces adorn the cast including Annabella Sciorra as Malee's mom, who is miscast as a psychiatrist, but she does handle the final scenes very well. Linus Roche (Thomas Wayne from Batman Begins) plays the grief stricken dad of the twins, and in a real surprise, Tony Roberts plays a doctor. Yes, the Tony Roberts from all of the Woody Allen movies in the 70's. The kids are played well by Conor Donovan (twins), Jessie Camacho (Leonard, who looks like a young Paul Sorvino) and Zoe Weizenbaum (Malee).

    Overall a pretty well constructed film, but would have liked to see a few script changes to prevent a few of the over-the-top moments.
  • This is a haunting coming-of-age film about children, bound by a common, shocking tragedy, who struggle to get on with life and overcome their own troubling problems. Despite the severity of issues conveyed in this film's overlapping vignettes, it never becomes melodramatic. Artful screen writing and direction infuse humor in the telling of these children's stories---stories rich with characters who are colorful, but never contrived. All of the children provide very genuine, endearing performances---essential if the audience is going to empathize with them and their disturbing behavior. This movie will frequently make you uncomfortable---very uncomfortable. But no matter how horrifying and even monstrous these children's actions may be, they never lose their appealing and disarming qualities as children. These are very cool kids, even the most troubled, who easily win your affection.

    During the course of the movie, one of the children queries the others by asking, "Do you know ninety-percent of people's problems are due to their inability to get over the past?" All of these children will be faced with this challenge. You hope all will overcome this obstacle, but sadly, not all of them will or should be able to get over their past.
  • nycritic21 November 2006
    Warning: Spoilers
    Apparently, whenever a gun makes it appearance early on in a Michael Cuesta film, you can guarantee that somehow it will find its way to the forefront of the action, usually culminating in an act of senseless violence. I'm not sure that this depiction is necessarily a good thing, especially when the leads in this movie are little more than child actors. I can understand the point -- violence always manages to make its way in one form or other into the homes of American families -- but for the most, this seems to be some perverted version of Judy Blume thrown onto our faces in the form of an "intelligent movie".

    Three stories intertwine, stemming from the tragic death of the twin brother of the main character played by Conor Donovan. The first is Conor's: he has a birth defect, a red smudge on the side of his face that has led him to believe his parents prefer his brother even after he has died. A heated argument between Conor's parents where the mother demands justice be served to the boys who caused her son's death triggers something in Conor that leads him to taunt the boy who is in prison, although he later befriends him after seeing him cry. Because really, it really was a senseless act that snowballed into tragedy.

    Tragedy also seems to be looming over Leonard Fisher and Malee Chuang but in different ways. Leonard, having barely escaped the fire that killed Conor's brother inside their treehouse, has decided to lose weight and pursues his goal with monomaniacal determination. Malee, on the other hand, falls for a hunky construction worker who is aware of her attraction and passively leads her on as he goes to her mother, a psychologist,for therapy. This is where the gun makes its appearance -- at his house, where Malee breaks in because she wants to get a peek at him. She gets the gun out of his house, gives it to Conor, forgets about it... and the third act is set.

    TWELVE AND HOLDING is an uncomfortable movie to watch because of the situation it places Malee. Yet, it's brutally honest in addressing adolescent crushes on people they look up to because it's something everyone goes through: everyone has had that irresistible attraction to someone older, a teacher perhaps, and written about it in their diary or blog... Malee decides to act it out instead, more than likely not fully aware of what she is doing. But because it's so honest and so true, it can become this mobile moment when people may react in a squeamish way. However, it's artfully handled -- especially when the construction worker (Jeremy Renner) later confesses how this extremely precarious scene helped him resolve some inner demons to Malee's mother (Annabella Sciorra).

    The other two boys' stories are a little less interesting. Leonard's obsession with losing weight puts him and his mother in a situation that looks exactly like a Rube Goldberg sequence. Conor's, while more believable, is still less satisfying because his parents, ,like Malee's and Leonards, are totally clueless about how to approach him. And it's because of this inability to relate that he finally acts out, and I have to say, Cuesta has to find other ways not to include the Necessary Gun into the picture. It is possible to tell a risky story without having to incorporate that into the story's message. But... that's my opinion. TWELVE AND HOLDING is better in some ways, but still... not quite.
  • Fantastic movie with a multitude of messages. Would make for an excellent movie to show and discuss in schools - I dare you :-) Acting is incredible and pretty much all comes trough the screen as real persons and not some abstractions from a writers imagination.

    What hopefully will get through to the viewers is how perceptive children are in reading the adults world both literally and the subtle emotions that adults/parents try to keep them from getting. Since most children doesn't have the experience and information needed to filter all this, it can have some really disturbing consequences when children acts in response as is clearly shown here. Luckily it isn't all children who grow up with these kind of experiences - at least not as extreme, but I'm afraid that a lot of parents would be very scared to know that an awful lot actually can relate to this movie...
  • Director Michael Cuesta continues to improve his admirable coverage of the child world we live in America today, with his second and even more captivating "Twelve and Holding". After making a name for himself with the controversial, but honestly made "L.I.E.", Cuesta continues his focus with the little covered underbelly of modern youth but broadens his narrative to fill out three amazing young characters. Tackling issues head on, whether courting controversy or not, Cuesta and noticeable first timer scribe Anthony Cipriano remain fearless in their explorations, never becoming intoxicated by the exploitation factor that lies right around the corner with every potential move. In effect, this style serves these bold young actors well in portraying an air of realism, no matter how extreme a situation, more distinctly so then any Larry Clark film has ever mustered. Despite the dramatic turns and extreme situations that fly through the quick film, the characters stay consistently grounded to their respective realities, no doubt due to the wonderfully moving material, but also in no small part to the triumphant three performances that usually held more sincerity and truth in simple glances then most overpriced, pretty faced, Hollywood players can ever try to fake us into pretending we are convinced. Despite the main character being the weakest of the three, and against some of the more implausible moments that puncture the believability, one would still be hard pressed to find a more incredible and challenging experience of preteen wonderment, at least from an American perspective, in many years
  • ghostsarescared17 July 2012
    How does this movie hold a 7.5 rating?! I spent most of the film cringing, groaning and giggling at inappropriate times. I feel like I could catch glimpses of what this film was trying to be, which was something rawer, something more profound. But most of the time it was like a TV movie on cough syrup. Why the Gilliam-esque angles? Why the horrible lighting? The score was ALL OVER THE PLACE and really out of touch with what was happening in the scene. Everything was overdone. The acting was terrible and cliché. Why do I care about any of these people? I was very confused as to whether this movie was trying to be serious or not. A vanity project. Try Harmony Korine or Todd Solondz if you want something like this, but better.
  • I feel the last reviewer was a little out of touch with reality. They felt the movie was too 'extreme', but I was actually drawn closer to the characters because the writer portrayed them as VERY real and believable. If I was that age, and someone did what was done to the boy in the movie, prison would be the least of their worries. These kids, and ALL kids, are not the innocent 'Beaver Cleavers' most adults think (or wish) all kids are. I for one, remember when I was 12. I did things like these kids did, and more. I was sexually active in a same sex relationship with someone older, another issue is addressed in the movie, and could relate to it even though the relationship portrayed in the movie is heterosexual. It is VERY rare to see ANY reference to adult - adolescent "relationships" where the adolescent is the sexual aggressor, and NOT the adult. It may be an ugly subject, but it IS reality.

    I give this movie an 11 on a scale of 1-10. I would also like to thank IFC Films for showing new releases on PayPer View so people who don't have access to theaters showing the films can see them. I wish ALL independent films were available in this manner.
  • The minute this film started playing, I was hooked. The story follows three 12 year olds who are the normal kind of kids you expect to bump into in your neighbourhood. Each has their own issues, as do all 12 year olds, and it is not till an immensely tragic death amongst them occurs, that they start confronting their issues and start trying to deal with them in their own way. Each very different. The story unravels beautifully and there are times you feel like you need to look away, and start squirming with unease and shock, and times you literally burst out laughing and then cry as well.. Well, I did anyway. I would highly recommend this to pretty much everyone I know, I cant believe it slipped through the net, and I have only just seen it. An absolute gem. To say it is like Stand By Me is a bold statement, but a deserved one. Its of the same calibre. Watch it.
  • "12 and holding" is another great movie directed by Michael Cuesta, who recently became my favourite movie director. If you are looking for a fine Coming Out of Age story – chances are that that you will find it all in "12 and holding " . It is a simple story – without much special effects or famous actors playing – but the way the story is shown will make you remember what you've seen .One could say that the movie was disturbing – as it showed things most people would never want to happen to them or their kids – at the same time everything seems to real. One just couldn't miss the exceptional performance of the young Conor Donovan who plays two roles – and does it so well, that I have to admit that I haven't noticed that both boys are played by the same actor.

    The soundtrack is extremely powerful – especially the melancholic music in some scenes. I did not notice any flaws and felt quite related to the actors. My opinion that all viewers would able to sense something similar to what they felt when they were growing up – that sense of anger, or desire for revenge …or the will to protect your relatives and friends .

    Despite of what some other reviewers wrote – I did not find the movie tough to watch – yes it deals with violence even death , but it does it in quite an unique way .
  • Warning: Spoilers
    12 and Holding was wonderful. The direction was some of the sharpest I've ever seen, allowing us to experience the story without having it shoved down our throats. The characters were terrifically drawn, showing the way 12 year olds commit acts without considering consequences. They have a goal, they do whatever they think is necessary to achieve the goal, they do not consider what might happen as a result of the action - this is true to life. Even the parents are seen from the point of view of the kids, namely as non-understanding grown-ups, not necessarily adversaries but not allies either, yet adults in the audience completely understood and related to the actions of the parents.

    speaking of the audience - it is rare to have a packed audience totally silent, as was the preview audience in attendance when I saw the movie. In fact, total silence happened many times during the movie, as did collective gasps.

    which begs the question - why do I call it an almost excellent movie? One very important pivotal plot development simply did not ring true for me. SPOILER SPOILER SPOILER ALERT!!! I did not believe the young girl would steal a gun.

    This was unfortunate. On the one hand, this did not spoil the movie for me and I would highly recommend the movie. On the other hand, I wish this particular plot element had not been included. The director and script writer could have found other ways to arrive at the gun's plot element. In fact, it would have been more effective to have a different plot element other than the gun, which surprised no one in the audience.

    Otherwise, the movie was excellent.
  • Michael Cuesta's TWELVE AND HOLDING is one of the most honest and most bittersweet films about growing up that I can think of. It details the lives and the minds of children with startling honesty and sweet simplicity. It is one of the few films I can say I've seen that treats it's subject matter in a very mature and brave way. It is sweet, sad, disturbing, funny, and all too real.

    The film details the affected lives of three children having difficulty recovering from the death of a close friend of theirs. Jacob(Conor Donovan) is the twin brother of Rudy, the boy who was killed. Jacob must deal with the guilt as well as the grief of his parents and of the accidental murderers. Leonard and Malee are close friends of Jacob. Malee falls in love with an ex-firefighter, Gus(Jeremy Renner), she meets at Rudy's funeral and subsequently tries to seduce him. Leonard suffers an injury as a result of the accident that killed Rudy and now has no ability to taste his food and uses it to his advantage to lose weight, despite the attitude of his parents.

    While the film occasionally drifts a tiny bit into cliché territory, this is a hard hitting and truly shattering experience. This is only Michael Cuesta's second film(his first being one of my personal favorites, L.I.E.) and yet he continues to surprise me with the overwhelming sense of clarity to be found in his films. TWELVE AND HOLDING is a startling reminder of the creativity and imagination to be found in the minds of today's independent filmmakers. The characters in this film are all so beautiful and so terrifying at the same time, particularly the characters of Gus and of Jacob. Very few of the characters are two-dimensional and they all are flawed in ways that make sense and that don't necessarily make them bad people. However, bad things come out of the mistakes of the characters. The ways in which the events are depicted are simply unforgettable. I've said too much already. Just see this film.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Saturday May 27, 3:45pm Broadway Performance Hall

    Monday May 29, 1:30pm Broadway Performance Hall

    "Ninety percent of all people's problems are because of the inability to get over the past."

    A tree house is firebombed with tragic consequences that alter the lives of three children in Michael Cuesta's second feature Twelve and Holding. Hatred and guilt as intense as the fire that took his twin brother consume Jake (Conor Donovan). "He's not in class anymore, he's dead." Leonard (Jesse Camacho) survives the fire, but looses his sense of taste. "You can't just eat apples all the time, it's unhealthy!" His decision to overcome his own obesity effects his entire family. Malee believes her emerging adulthood will save her without the help of an insensitive mother. Anthony Cipriano's screenplay concludes with some ambiguity, but draws a compelling picture from a wonderfully epic use of metaphor, set to a smart and appealing pop score. With a scope and style reminiscent of films like Bully and River's Edge, Twelve and Holding is a sensitive look at accepting life's emotional trauma and overcoming it.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    'Twelve and Holding' was an amazingly refreshing, surprise and gem of an independent film. I had very little to go on prior to viewing, only knowing that one of my favorite up-coming actors, Renner, starred in it. And being ignorant prior completely paid in dividends with the delight on how well made this adolescent coming-of-dark-ages movie was made. Though not a horror movie (despite one character donning a "Jason Voorhees"-like hockey mask,) I could certainly see Stephen King's vision of best buddies growing up too fast with adult tragedies, such as in his novels 'IT' and 'The Body' (or the movie 'Stand By Me.') How well they captured King's take on young kids dealing with very bad things was like watching a brand new King novel on screen. In this small town, each of three kids has their own demons thrust upon them. One's heavy and criticized to the point he embarks on bettering his and his mother's life. One's in love with someone 2 (or 3) times older. And the final has probably the most to worry about: dealing with large birthmark on his face, a brother who died "by accident" as well as a replacement brother. I really don't want to give away too much – believe me when I tell you, I barely scratched the surface. Sufficient to say, you need to see this movie. Excellent performances all around – I can't believe no one was nominated for Oscars, let alone the screenplay, director, etc. I haven't seen such a movie since the string of adolescent-drama films produced in the 70s/80s, such as, again, 'Stand By Me.' 'Holding' is completely original, had great music, appropriately comedic moments, excellently cast, suspenseful, emotional, and extremely thought provoking. Best recommendation is to recommend this gem to everyone after watching it.
  • I came upon this movie by accident while channel surfing late one night and I am pleased that I did. The movie had just started and I was riveted from the very beginning. The performances of the actors, both adults and adolescents, were outstanding.

    This movie has a deeply moving script. It is about children, but the movie deals with very adult situations. Although brutally painful to watch at times, the uniquely individual manner in which each character handles tragedy and adversity is fascinating. I felt compelled to reach out and hug those kids and perhaps slap the parents, as they were not paying attention to their children. The storyline was interesting and kept the viewer's interest. The interaction between the young friends added a touch of humor.

    I would highly recommend this movie, especially to parents. A pleasant surprise.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Children, we see them grow everyday, as individuals and as people, looking back at the time you were 12 years old, you could only imagine what growth came next. Micheal Cuesta makes this brilliant film into a work of magic of growing up, dealing with our emotions and change. And proves yet again why he is probably one of the most brilliant directors in Hollywood today. 12 and holding not only proves this, but makes the clear statement.

    The film starts out as we meet our main characters Jacob,Maelee,Leonard and Rudy. We see them going day to day in there lives, with each there own problems. Maelee has just started puberty and menstruating, Leonard is eating so much and gaining weight his family is no better, and Twin brothers Rudy and Jacob, Jacob in which he hides his face because of the huge birth mark on his face, and Rudy who wants to defend his tree house and his brother. But the gang is soon faced with a troublesome occurrence. Two bullies decide to throw Molotov cocktails inside the tree house while Rudy is in there Leonard as well. Leonard manages to escape but Rudy is caught and it takes his life changing the path for each of our characters.

    Jacob decides to plot revenge against his brothers killers while visiting them at a juvenile prison. Instead he bonds with one of the bullies, becoming friends with him, which starts impacting his life, while his family is changing around him.

    Leonard who escaped the fire is diagnosed with a disorder, one in which he can't smell or taste what he's eating, but it leads him on a path to start eating apples and start eating healthier and realize his weight is a problem and he needs to fix it by exercising everyday and even starts looking towards trying to help his family.

    Maelee takes her emotions she realizes shes attracted to a man twice her age, whom she looks pretty for, sings songs for. She becomes obsessed with him, trying to be with him, she doesn't care how old he is, only that her heart is telling her she really loves this man, who he himself has problems of his own.

    I won't get into much spoilers here about what happens to the characters as this movie is just a gift to unravel, you feel the characters grow each time there story is presented and shown. The writing is top notch as well as the acting. None of the kids overact in there situations but play out there roles as regular kids and when a situation arises they take to there own. Cuesta does a fantastic job to make you care for these characters and see what will happen next, and that most likely you will sympathize with a character or even connect to your own. Cuesta is never afraid to walk over the line thats drawn, he goes there, he crosses it and portrays real people in real situations. If anything 12 and Holding is one of those movies that are is so great and so well done, that it will probably be passed up for Oscars. My only quip about the movie is that, it leaves you wanting more! You want to see where there situations have led them what will happen to them, but i guess thats up to us to figure out, as to where or what we think will happen to them, or how they will grow. In total this is definitely a movie not be missed.

    A Defnite 10/10 Rent or buy this one to give it a chance.
  • An obscure little gem. The characters are intricately realistic, and it feels as if they are popping out of the screen. The acting is surely a result of brilliant directing and very mature talent on the children's part. What makes this movie a success is neither the budget nor the experience of the cast and crew. What makes this movie a success is, almost assuredly, the life experience and passion that was pored into the script and the performances. In a word, it is genuine.
  • The look of this film was horrible. It felt like a bad Disney Channel movie or a sitcom. Everything was way too illuminated, there was absolutely no depth. The inconsistent angles were incredibly distracting. I don't understand how these people get work.

    Also, the stereotypical nature of every character was a bit much. The obese father eating french fries while talking to the doctor, their plates of donuts, the child insisting on wearing a sweat suit and sweatbands. It was all so cliché.

    I wouldn't recommend this movie to anyone. That is, of course, unless you're looking for tips on how not to make a good movie.
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