MovieChat Forums > Nebraska (2014) Discussion > Appeals More to Those That Can Relate

Appeals More to Those That Can Relate


I'm noticing a trend on these boards in which the city dwellers and international crowds don't appreciate this movie while folks that grew up in rural America liked the film. For me, the elderly characters made this movie hilarious because there are people I've known from my hometown that have the same demeanor and sense of humor. Life isn't necessarily boring in small towns. I think you have more time to ponder and appreciate the simpler things in life. It was a beautiful film that brought back memories of my hometown and my dearly departed elderly family. 8/10

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I have mixed feelings. On the one hand I love Middle Americans, especially how kind and friendly most of them are. Not all of them are like that obviously, as this film depicts, but generally I find less of the cynicism and distrust that you feel in the city.

On the other hand, I like states that have mountains, trees, and oceans.

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That's weird, all I see from people from "rural" America is their complaining about so-and-so being an inaccurate portrayal of this and that, completely missing the point all the while.

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I don't see that connection at all. I enjoyed the film thoroughly -- I also rated it 8/10 -- but I've lived my entire life in the city. As StarskyandChinaHutch pointed out, there are threads on the forum where people who grew up in the rural Midwest in general or Nebraska in particular take exception to the portrayal of rural Nebraska in this film.

To me, the story operates on a more subtle level than most, with the characters and plot building slowly yet (to me) engagingly over the course of the film. If I was going to make an unsubstantiated general statement about who tends to like the film, I'd say it's more likely to be what I'll call patient viewers, who likely tend to be older viewers with a more diverse viewing history (and this is NOT a theory that older viewers would tend to like the film more because they can relate to the older characters). But I also bet there are younger viewers who like the film, and as I said, that is totally unsubstantiated.

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Woody and his wife reminded me so much of my in-laws, minus the dementia and drinking part.

Even my father-in-law saw the resemblance between him and his wife and Woody and his wife!

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That's like me saying "my uncle is like Van Gogh". Why? well he can't paint and he's not crazy but he lost his ear in a fight over a woman.

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I'm a born and raised city girl (Los Angeles)and I could easily relate to this movie. I can see why younger people who've not yet experienced anything significant, wouldn't understand the movie. I don't feel it has anything to do with the environment.

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I liked the film in large part because I am from Iowa and had family living in Lincoln. It hit home quite often.

I can see the men of my family crowded into the living room watching TV, an old one or two falling asleep, cousins talking cars, bickering, mostly no one looking or sounding overly bright.

The quarreling over who owed who money seemed more than real. It doesn't depict rural people all that favorably but I still love some of those aunts and uncles now that they are gone....maybe more so because they are gone.

My significant other liked the film too, was born and reared in California around Stanford. The film has a broader audience I think.

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Really, thats what youre taking away from this movie, rural america? I think what most people who relate to the movie relate to is having an alcoholic father or dealing with parents dementia, or growing old.

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I don't think you're totally wrong as such, but I still think you might be a little bit sweeping. I'm from southern England, born and raised in London, now living in a largish town not that far outside London. I've certainly not been in rural America; and rural here is probably far from what's rural in the US, at least in scale. I certainly don't fall into your trends of those who appreciate this film. However, I feel that the story is so human that it's hard not to relate to it in some way, as long as you open up and try to look deeper, try to look beyond your own limitations. I found it a really lovely film, really emotionally engaging. It was nice to enjoy a story that's so far from my own experiences. But then, there was something innate within the story that I could relate to.

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I don't necessarily think that is true, but I grew up in a larger city and could definitely relate to the characters. I could even envision my father talking to one of his brothers and asking if he still drove that Chevy. Or one of them sitting outside watching the traffic go by. Maybe this was more of a generational movie about families that about city v. rural living.

I actually loved the movie, and the more I think about it, the more I liked it. By taking this useless road trip, David learned so much about his father that he would never have known otherwise.

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The road trip was not useless. How wrong you are. The film had some "Trip to Bountiful" moments, especially when Dern toured the old house. This film is far more than a depiction of rural vs city life. It's about a journey by a Father and Son. I took my ailing Father to see his sister for the last time in 1998. It was 3 months before his death and those memories are burned into my mind and I am grateful to have been able to spend the time with him. We met some of his old friends and I learned a few things about my Father I never understood before the trip. Relating to this film is about parental relationships and how special moments can come at the end of a life. This film kept taking me back to that trip in 1998 and this is what made the film emotional to me on a very deep interpersonal level.

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It was 3 months before his death and those memories are burned into my mind and I am grateful to have been able to spend the time with him. We met some of his old friends and I learned a few things about my Father I never understood before the trip. Relating to this film is about parental relationships and how special moments can come at the end of a life. This film kept taking me back to that trip in 1998 and this is what made the film emotional to me on a very deep interpersonal level.

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6 years later, I check in to say that's a great story and I think it is why a movie like "Nebraska" -- despite the fictional specifics of the story(the quest for one million that doesn't exist; the villains who want some of the money) -- triggers such memories for all of us.

I took similar trips with both of my parents in the last year of their respective lives. No one knew exactly when death would arrive, but it was "close on the horizon," and those trips were arranged. I'll never forget them.

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