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  1. www.metacritic.com › movie › sollers-pointSollers Point - Metacritic

    May 11, 2018 · Sollers Point boasts a cool, classically observational tone marked by Sabier Kirchner’s invitingly elegant cinematography that eschews the vogue for artificial shaky-cam edginess, and the naturalistic detail of a lived-in neighborhood populated by at least a dozen instantly memorable characters — by turns stressed, satisfied, curious, weird and sad — just doing their thing.

  2. Full Review | Original Score: 6/10 | Sep 24, 2018. Matthew Roe Under the Radar. Though the ending may be a touch off-footed, and some performances range from the cliched to the monotonous, the ...

  3. May 11, 2018 · Keith, a small-time drug dealer, is under house arrest at the home of his father in Baltimore. He re-enters a community scarred by unemployment, neglect and deeply entrenched segregation. There, he pushes back against his surrounding limitations as he tries to find a way out of his own internal prison. Matthew Porterfield. Director, Story, Writer.

  4. May 17, 2018 · R. 1h 41m. By Glenn Kenny. May 17, 2018. It’s a desultory existence for Keith (the appealing McCaul Lombardi), a young man living with his dad in the Baltimore neighborhood that gives this movie ...

  5. Sollers Point. A small-time drug dealer was under house arrest at the home of his father in Baltimore. He re-enters a community scarred by unemployment, neglect and deeply entrenched segregation. There, he pushes back against his surrounding limitations as he tries to find a way out of his own internal prison. 18 IMDb 5.7 1 h 41 min 2018. X-Ray R.

  6. Sollers Point. 2017 · 1 hr 42 min. R. Drama · Crime. Released from prison and living under house arrest, Keith struggles to start over in a community scarred by unemployment, neglect and segregation. Subtitles: English. Starring: McCaul Lombardi Zazie Beetz Jim Belushi Tom Guiry Marin Ireland. Directed by: Matthew Porterfield. Released from ...

  7. Critics reviews. Keith is newly released from prison and living with his father under house arrest in Baltimore. Despite his good intentions, Keith struggles to establish himself within a community scarred by unemployment, neglect, and segregation, finding that he may be reverting to his old ways.