The Place Beyond the Pines

One moment can change your life.

7.0
20132h 20m

A motorcycle stunt rider considers committing a crime in order to provide for his wife and child, an act that puts him on a collision course with a cop-turned-politician.

Production

Logo for Sidney Kimmel Entertainment
Logo for Hunting Lane Films
Logo for Sierra/Affinity

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Official Trailer

Official Trailer

Thumbnail for video: Luke's Last Phone Call

Luke's Last Phone Call

Thumbnail for video: Stuntman Ryan Gosling Turns to Crime

Stuntman Ryan Gosling Turns to Crime

Thumbnail for video: Ryan Gosling's True Love

Ryan Gosling's True Love

Thumbnail for video: Luke Shows Off Bike Stunt

Luke Shows Off Bike Stunt

Thumbnail for video: Luke’s Perfect Bank Heist

Luke’s Perfect Bank Heist

Thumbnail for video: Luke's Bank Robbery Gone Wrong

Luke's Bank Robbery Gone Wrong

Thumbnail for video: 20" Trailer

20" Trailer

Thumbnail for video: Returning Home: THE PLACE BEYOND THE PINES Schenectady Screening

Returning Home: THE PLACE BEYOND THE PINES Schenectady Screening

Thumbnail for video: "5 Star Review" TV Spot

"5 Star Review" TV Spot

Cast

Photo of Ryan Gosling

Ryan Gosling

Luke Glanton

Photo of Bradley Cooper

Bradley Cooper

Avery Cross

Photo of Eva Mendes

Eva Mendes

Romina Gutierrez

Photo of Rose Byrne

Rose Byrne

Jennifer Cross

Photo of Ray Liotta

Ray Liotta

Peter Deluca

Photo of Dane DeHaan

Dane DeHaan

Jason Kancam

Photo of Emory Cohen

Emory Cohen

AJ Cross

Photo of Mahershala Ali

Mahershala Ali

Kofi Kancam

Photo of Bruce Greenwood

Bruce Greenwood

Bill Killcullen

Photo of Ben Mendelsohn

Ben Mendelsohn

Robin Van Der Hook

Photo of Harris Yulin

Harris Yulin

Al Cross

Photo of Robert Clohessy

Robert Clohessy

Chief Weirzbowski

Photo of Olga Merediz

Olga Merediz

Malena Gutierrez

Photo of Shannon Plumb

Shannon Plumb

Lady In Ice Cream Shop

Photo of Brian Smyj

Brian Smyj

Officer Jefferson

Photo of Lynette Howell Taylor

Lynette Howell Taylor

Political Media Advisor

Photo of Mark McCracken

Mark McCracken

Drug Busting Cop #1

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Reviews

J

John Chard

8/10

If you ride like lightning, you're going to crash like thunder.

The Place Beyond the Pines is directed by Derek Cianfrance and Cianfrance co-writes the screenplay with Ben Coccio and Darius Marder. It stars Ryan Gosling, Bradley Cooper, Eva Mendes, Emory Cohen, Dane Dehaan, Ray Liotta, Ben Mendelsohn and Rose Byrne. Music is by Mike Patton and cinematography by Sean Bobbitt.

A motorcycle stunt rider finds he has a son he never knew about and turns to robbing banks as a way to provide for both the child and his one time lover. This puts him on collision course with an ambitious rookie cop that has serious life changing consequences for both of them...

The Place Beyond the Pines (superb title) is a three parter of a character study that examines the critical decisions we make in life whilst putting different characters along a road of reckoning. The atmosphere of palpable human foibles is quickly established by Cianfrance, the introduction of stunt rider Luke Ganton (Gosling mesmerising) the kick start for what will be a multiple character piece even though the narrative core is purely about Ganton and cop Avery (Cooper) and their impact on each other and those connected to each.

Such is a key element of events in the story, it's difficult to say too much because this picture demands that spoilers are not dished out willy nilly. Going in blind without knowledge of the story trajectory is a must to garner maximum rewards. What can be said is that for the final third the pic does lose momentum, there's a big shift of emphasis (though critically connected to all that has gone on previously). It's not a film killer, though, for this remains a damn fine film, one that is packed with utterly gripping sequences, but the ambitiousness shown by Cianfrance is almost the undoing of a fascinatingly engrossing experience.

The consequences of choices are profoundly explored here, the multigenerational axis riveting in execution by director and writers alike. It also looks terrific, evocative cinematography from Bobbitt (12 Years a Slave) is in turn boosted by Patton's tonally compliant musical score. Ultimately, to enjoy fully you will have to accept implausible contrivances and that the psychological digging never really achieves all that it should. A bit of better thought for the last third and some trimming of the run time would have helped greatly, but this is still quality film making and recommended to grown up film fans for sure. 8/10

H

HASSAN2003

Great movie

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