The Sublime and Beautiful
The Sublime and Beautiful
| 06 June 2014 (USA)
The Sublime and Beautiful Trailers

David Conrad is a college professor and sometimes philanderer raising three children in a small Kansas suburb with his wife Kelly. When sudden tragedy strikes the family in the days before Christmas, David and Kelly's marriage is brought to its breaking point and David's desire for retribution leads him into uncharted moral territory with the question: what can we forgive?

Reviews
Ensofter

Overrated and overhyped

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Aubrey Hackett

While it is a pity that the story wasn't told with more visual finesse, this is trivial compared to our real-world problems. It takes a good movie to put that into perspective.

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Arianna Moses

Let me be very fair here, this is not the best movie in my opinion. But, this movie is fun, it has purpose and is very enjoyable to watch.

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Hattie

I didn’t really have many expectations going into the movie (good or bad), but I actually really enjoyed it. I really liked the characters and the banter between them.

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Buick_Beast

The Sublime & Beautiful, I haven't seen a film this raw & performances this real in a film since Laws of Gravity, from the moment I watched this Man's World, from the first unhinged twinge of the camera, I knew the World we were entering was already on shaky ground, the family unit was so beautiful & full of life, but there's a sudden reason for the camera work that creeps in, you'll have to catch your breath, again & again as it unfolds that this man's lively World & gorgeous children might be temporary. Most Filmmakers, as well as Lead Actors, could have easily directed this into the arena of melodrama, but once again, the potency of the Reality I was seeing before me made me loudly weep & then hold the emotions in, as the characters viscerally do the same. Get a drink of water before this one & go into this journey full force because this man's reality will unfold before you in such a subtle yet spellbinding & mesmerizing way, you won't be able to take your eyes off the screen. This movie took me to all kinds of places within myself, my own moral conundrums & just spit me out onto the floor, from moments in which the Man's Wife declares "Here goes the Woman with the Dead Kids" to the moment he confronts the drunk driver in a wonderfully, raw scene, only to assume what transpired there, till the very end, in which David Conrad, played brilliantly by Blake Robbins, seems to have his own epiphany in the house of the relatives of the Drunk Driver. I was on pins & needles. This didn't feel like acting to me. This felt very real which means the filmmakers did it right. If you've ever experienced loss, any kind or have never experienced profound loss & want to know how a human being truly feels in these situations, the journey it takes man/woman on, this film should be shown in film schools/universities, it's that potent, it set a bar for the reality of Human Grieving, Forgiveness & it's both Sublime & Beautiful.

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LizSmithMoore

Blake Robbins took on a daunting task: Writing a story about a profoundly sad event in the life of a family. The hazard in such an effort is to fall into tactics of cheap and obvious manipulation. Not only did Robbins tell the story with realism and respect, he carried it through 90 minutes of film further enriched by the right actors, cinematography, musical score and all the other elements of a nearly perfect movie. I did not cry when I watched it, but not because I wasn't moved. Blake put me in David's head and I felt locked in a state of shock and denial. Add David's struggle with middle-aging even before the tragedy, witness the impact on David and Kelly's marriage, the reactions of friends, family and community, and this film feels as real as it possibly could. As art, it is the best possible treatment of one of the darkest aspects of the human condition.

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RJ_Jeffreys

Rarely, am I so moved by watching a film that I feel compelled to write a review. The Sublime and Beautiful is just that kind of a rare gem of a movie. Blake Robbins, has created an exquisitely moving and excellently written and directed film. Grief and loss are themes in many, many films and so very few of them honestly and believably explore those subjects. And, even less often, have deftly drawn you into their characters with any real sense of depth and dimension. The Sublime and Beautiful indelibly does. The dialogue rings true in scene after scene, and even in the moments where the characters say nothing, there is still an emotional engagement and deep involvement felt with them. I commend Mr. Robbins for having the courage and vision to make a film, which includes many scenes of silent moments. For me, they spoke volumes more than words could have ever expressed, instead. Most of us have suffered profound losses in our lives, and you will find yourself relating with these masterfully portrayed characters --long after the film ends. I highly recommend The Sublime and Beautiful as a "must see" film of the New Year!

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BasicLogic

this is one of the saddest films ever made. the screenplay is so thoughtfully deep, Blake Robbins, the screenplay writer, the director and the main character....the only word i can say is WOW...!!! he really knows the saddest feeling what a human being would have to face, suffer and to deal with. the family, the kids, the wife and the marriage before after the tragedy. the relationship among friends and colleagues, the mind, the shocks, the lost, the void and empty space of a soul. the lost hope of tomorrow. the....there's nothing i could say more when and after i watched this film. guess drunk driving is the most heartless and irresponsible behavior that a human being could commit.

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