18 reviews
I truly wish this would have been a movie inspired by the true story, rather than what they gave us. The trailer looked so fantastic and the cast is ofc stellar, so I was very excited to watch it, but the movie although building suspense and tension, did not really do much with said tension. This could have been a 10min beautiful Short, instead it was pretty much the same thematic thing happening again and again with very little change. Also, why the hell was this movie so full of homoerotic subtext that then didn't go anywhere? If the movie had actually done something with that, it might have been interesting. But it didn't. By the end I was very much left with the feeling of "That's...it?" Very unsatisfactory, which I think is due to it being based on a real story. Would have preferred this as either a documentary or a more liberal, inspired-by but not beholden-to kinda story. Fantastic visuals though and solid acting, especially from Zachery Quinto. Elordi was also good. I also liked the suspense that was build in it by smaller scenes, just wish it had gone somewhere better.
- moralpollution
- Mar 8, 2024
- Permalink
- I-love-Popcorn
- Jan 13, 2024
- Permalink
This film was hard work. I get that it's a true story and you have to be somewhat loyal to the reality of what actually happened, but man were these two tedious people to follow for 90 minutes. One is a wimp and the other is a psychopath. A psychopath can be a fun character if written correctly, but this one was just boring. He had nothing interesting to say and when he was killing someone it was just grim.
There were times when the movie showed some promise. I liked the addition of the monkey (sorry, chimpanzee) to the story and the added dimension that brought to the proceedings. Too often though scenes felt very forced and like they were just there to give the film some kind of purpose.
Basically I didn't care. The film never found a way to get me invested. This one wasn't for me. 5/10.
There were times when the movie showed some promise. I liked the addition of the monkey (sorry, chimpanzee) to the story and the added dimension that brought to the proceedings. Too often though scenes felt very forced and like they were just there to give the film some kind of purpose.
Basically I didn't care. The film never found a way to get me invested. This one wasn't for me. 5/10.
- jtindahouse
- Sep 4, 2024
- Permalink
It is 1964. Jim (Zachary Quinto) is driving across America with a trained monkey. He picks up hitchhiker Bobby (Jacob Elordi).
There is something wrong with Jim. There are red flags flying all over the place and he's just strange. There is something really wrong with him. The monkey may be the most normal folk in that vehicle. From that beginning, I couldn't shake the feeling that it's all very fake. The fact that it took inspiration from a real incident matters very little. By the closing texts, I'm feeling completely lost in the strange characters in weird tones and questionable everything.
There is something wrong with Jim. There are red flags flying all over the place and he's just strange. There is something really wrong with him. The monkey may be the most normal folk in that vehicle. From that beginning, I couldn't shake the feeling that it's all very fake. The fact that it took inspiration from a real incident matters very little. By the closing texts, I'm feeling completely lost in the strange characters in weird tones and questionable everything.
- SnoopyStyle
- Jul 15, 2024
- Permalink
Never hearing of this being made and a surprise to see the cast involved, I was definitely disappointed in this watch. The story was very slow, the acting wasn't all there and I don't wanna even talk about Spanky. After a great run in 2023 with "Priscilla" and "Saltburn" I was excited to see the next performance from Jacob Elordi, but this sadly was not one of his best. Leaving Patrick J. Adams to be my favourite part of this film, even with the minor screen time.
I've always been a sucker for crime/thriller films, and after reading the plot summary I was intrigued. But this was very far from a thriller with any suspense, not a single time did I feel nervous for any characters on screen.
Overall probably one of the worst of the entire year and we've just started.
I've always been a sucker for crime/thriller films, and after reading the plot summary I was intrigued. But this was very far from a thriller with any suspense, not a single time did I feel nervous for any characters on screen.
Overall probably one of the worst of the entire year and we've just started.
- UnderTheScene
- Jan 23, 2024
- Permalink
I could tell within the first 30 minute that this was written and directed by children who have no experience in real life. I would guess that their parent paid for their film school education, and they have watched a lot of movies, which they assume would give them the ability to make a movie of their own. But there is nothing original or interesting here. Sorry, boys, you failed. Your characters are false, your story is derivative, and the movie doesn't even have any style. It's such a shame that you wasted the efforts of decent actors like Zachary Quinto and Jacob Elordi. Time to give up filmmaking and find a real job. I hear Applebee's is hiring.
- contactsteverogers
- Aug 1, 2024
- Permalink
Truly original movie with a potential to become a cult classic. Beautifully acted and executed it keeps you on the edge with suspense and almost surrealism. There are so many side stories unfolding including inner complexes and complexities of the two leads and social cultural climate underlying. It sets a wonderfully fresh optics to the road story movies. The Spanky part of the Route 66 till the bitter end deserves honest debate on humans' treatment of animals as well as the entire circus business. This boutique movie proves once again that Jacob Elordi is a real cinematic gem. Zachary Quinto is also a very actor and brilliant again in this movie.
- haldunarmagan
- Jan 15, 2024
- Permalink
Zachary Quinto and Jacob Elordi star in this thriller based on a true crime that occurred in the 1960s. Jim (Zachary Quinto) , a famous animal trainer who transports a popular TV chimpanzee named Spanky, picks up Bobby (Jacob Elordi), a mysterious and attractive stranger, on a desolate stretch of Route 66. Jim and Bobby small talk but the conversation turns tense when Bobby reacts negatively to Jim asking about his discharge from the Air Force. In the risked journey take place curious tensions and bonds between two and at times three peculiar roles.
A slow and somewhat boring film in the form of a "Road Movie" with too much conversation, thrills, murders and a brief character study. It's a pretty deliberate and easy film that relies heavily on the two main characters, who make the film, which otherwise has nothing special. Based on actual events, in fact the role Bobby is based off Larry Lee Ranes, a serial killer from Kalamazoo, MI. It's simply a long trip along Route 66, where the main character Zachary Quinto picks up the murderer Jacob Elordi, and along the way, there are several murderous adventures, confrontations and stops along the way: in roadshops, gas station, a mechanic garage, a pharmacy and in a town where they meet two girls.
Starring two rising stars who give competent performances despite the bland script, they are: Zachary Quinto famous for Spock in the modern Star Trek saga, Heroes and Hitman: Agent 47 , as well as Jacob Elordi of Saltburn, Priscilla or Euphoria. Jacob Elordi is expanding his auteur collaborations and will star in Guillermo del Toro's upcoming "Frankenstein" as the titular monster. And another starring is a chimpanzee called Spanky that died of natural causes in Philadelphia.
In the film only highlights the colorful cinematography by Sean Bagley, shot along the Route 66 and in Four Aces Movie Ranch ,Ave Q, Palmdale, California. The motion picture was mediocrely directed by by recently deceased Jeffrey Darling due to a surf accident. In fact, at the end of the film there is a mention: ¨In memory of Jeffrey Darling¨. This filmaker Jeffrey Darling was born in Australia, he was a cinematographer and director, usually working as a cameraman in television and cinema; known for The Crossing (1990), Crowded House: Not the Girl You Think You Are (1996) , Young Einstein (1988) and The place at the coast (1987). This ¨He Went That Way(2023)¨ was his only and final feature film of his life.
A slow and somewhat boring film in the form of a "Road Movie" with too much conversation, thrills, murders and a brief character study. It's a pretty deliberate and easy film that relies heavily on the two main characters, who make the film, which otherwise has nothing special. Based on actual events, in fact the role Bobby is based off Larry Lee Ranes, a serial killer from Kalamazoo, MI. It's simply a long trip along Route 66, where the main character Zachary Quinto picks up the murderer Jacob Elordi, and along the way, there are several murderous adventures, confrontations and stops along the way: in roadshops, gas station, a mechanic garage, a pharmacy and in a town where they meet two girls.
Starring two rising stars who give competent performances despite the bland script, they are: Zachary Quinto famous for Spock in the modern Star Trek saga, Heroes and Hitman: Agent 47 , as well as Jacob Elordi of Saltburn, Priscilla or Euphoria. Jacob Elordi is expanding his auteur collaborations and will star in Guillermo del Toro's upcoming "Frankenstein" as the titular monster. And another starring is a chimpanzee called Spanky that died of natural causes in Philadelphia.
In the film only highlights the colorful cinematography by Sean Bagley, shot along the Route 66 and in Four Aces Movie Ranch ,Ave Q, Palmdale, California. The motion picture was mediocrely directed by by recently deceased Jeffrey Darling due to a surf accident. In fact, at the end of the film there is a mention: ¨In memory of Jeffrey Darling¨. This filmaker Jeffrey Darling was born in Australia, he was a cinematographer and director, usually working as a cameraman in television and cinema; known for The Crossing (1990), Crowded House: Not the Girl You Think You Are (1996) , Young Einstein (1988) and The place at the coast (1987). This ¨He Went That Way(2023)¨ was his only and final feature film of his life.
Movies based on true stories always have my preference, certainly if it's about true crime and serial killers. I had never heard about this story before though, so it was a surprise. They probably embellished the whole story a bit so it felt more fiction than non-fiction. I really doubt that it went like this. That said it was pleasant to watch, mostly because of the good acting from Jacob Elordi and Zachary Quinto. The chimpanzee looked a bit fake but overall it was okay. Not a lot of action considering it's about a serial killer, and a rather slow pace, but still good enough due to the good acting.
- deloudelouvain
- Jan 31, 2024
- Permalink
Why is the serial killer always sucking on his thumb? It's weird.. he has no likeable qualities at all.. He is just a terrible character all around. During the entire movie, all that I cared about was seeing that chimp away from that psycho. Come to find out, ol the chimp is a human actor, which makes it even more odd. At this point I'm just writing because I still need 228 characters to write..
What else? The serial killer has about two brain cells. He's a creep. It's a slow burn, I had to skip through some of it. Ok, 80 more characters.. there isn't much left to say, I'm in the middle of the movie and it looks like they might become friends.
- vmassey-02553
- May 18, 2024
- Permalink
In 1964-based true-tale crime-drama "He Went That Way" mild-mannered down-on-his-luck chimpanzee handler Zachary Quinto picks up hitcher Jacob Elordi... who has deep psychological issues. Events escalate but the two (and Quinto's chimp) form an unlikely yet plausible bond (rubbing off on each other to an extent) as they travel Route 66, thru a series of largely dark encounters (with the likes of Troy Evans). Quinto & Elordi are terrific (no wonder the latter's a rising star), Evan M Wiener's screenplay is original & engaging, and Jeffrey Darling does a fine job bringing it all home in the only movie he ever directed before passing away (RIP). It's a tad different, but it's good.
- danieljfarthing
- Jan 14, 2024
- Permalink
Strange & unpredictable but not in a good way. Great leads that overact their roles. An interesting cross-country Western tone with very solid cinematography. Yet the screenplay is missing big elements to give it a purpose.
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. Strange & unpredictable but not in a good way. Great leads that overact their roles. An interesting cross-country Western tone with very solid cinematography. Yet the screenplay is missing big elements to give it a purpose.
. .
. Strange & unpredictable but not in a good way. Great leads that overact their roles. An interesting cross-country Western tone with very solid cinematography. Yet the screenplay is missing big elements to give it a purpose.
. .
. Strange & unpredictable but not in a good way. Great leads that overact their roles. An interesting cross-country Western tone with very solid cinematography. Yet the screenplay is missing big elements to give it a purpose.
. .
. Strange & unpredictable but not in a good way. Great leads that overact their roles. An interesting cross-country Western tone with very solid cinematography. Yet the screenplay is missing big elements to give it a purpose.
- griffithxjohnson
- Sep 13, 2024
- Permalink
I don't understand why this movie has such a low average rating. First of all, its charm lies in its old-school vibe which lies in being engaging despite the story being simple, and that is thanks to great actors, good direction by the director, and beautiful cinematography. The movies nowadays are mostly shootings and chases, which just make me yawn, or fantasy that insults one's intelligence, but here, the thriller is based on the relationship between two characters. Jacob Elordi, as always, is wonderful, he's having a great time and everything he gets into, he does brilliantly, Zachary Quinto is equally wonderful, I really miss movies like that, movies like they used to make.
- JoshuaMercott
- May 3, 2024
- Permalink
When I read that this story was based on a real life serial killer, I had to see it and I was not disappointed.
Larry Lee Ranes is the actual killer and he is named Bobby here and is played to the hilt by Jacob Elordi. His mannerisms are similar to those of the Charles Starkweather character in Badlands with Martin Sheen as the James Dean type of character.
Jim is on the road with his show biz chimp and he picks up the youthful and innocent looking hitchhiker(Elordi), not realizing that his passenger is on the run after a few brutal murders.
The violent acts are briefly shown in flashbacks and the film is more a character study than a true crime story.
The two leads have perfect chemistry and He Went That Way is a solid 8/10.
Larry Lee Ranes is the actual killer and he is named Bobby here and is played to the hilt by Jacob Elordi. His mannerisms are similar to those of the Charles Starkweather character in Badlands with Martin Sheen as the James Dean type of character.
Jim is on the road with his show biz chimp and he picks up the youthful and innocent looking hitchhiker(Elordi), not realizing that his passenger is on the run after a few brutal murders.
The violent acts are briefly shown in flashbacks and the film is more a character study than a true crime story.
The two leads have perfect chemistry and He Went That Way is a solid 8/10.
Loved this jem and hope more find this delight! I love seeing old timers stories make it to the silverscreen. The only critism I have is the choice for the young girl's hair (outside the rock & roll dance) should of really went more authentic (no young woman/woman) wouldn't of had her hair not teased, tight curls, or a crew cut. I get it tho, budget. Still, any older woman could of shown the direction pictures of the beehives, pin curls, flips that were a must. Makeup was heavy eyeliner that would of been washed away before coming home. It would of been a good way to show how we all deceive to get what we want. I know a guy like drifter and he needs to go back to jail! But I'm also a kind soul who gives second chances, so this is good to shoe how bad things happen to good people, how Stalkholmn (sp) Syndrome happens, and the beginning was a brilliant twist! Very good!
In 1964, professional ice skater and animal trainer Dave Pitts encountered a young hitchhiker who was on a killing spree. The story was fictionalized in Conrad Hilberry's book "Luke Karamazov," which is the source of "He Went That Way," the feature directing debut of cinematographer Jeff Darling. Jacob Elordi plays Bobby, the nasty, brash killer, while Zachary Quinto plays Jim, the diffident trainer. Jim has troubles, including a wobbly marriage, debt, and bad work prospects for the chimp. Bobby is apt to add to his woes, but the two bond anyway. Elordi's performance in "He Went That Way" lacks the discipline he applied to his work in "Priscilla" and "Saltburn." The film is laboriously quirky, with an indifferent script that feeds Elordi almost as much profanity as Al Pacino uses in "Scarface." The best entertainment is archival footage of the actual Spanky ice-skating, but the rest of the movie is not worth watching. "He Went That Way" is a mid-century indie film that tells the true story of Dave Pitts, an ice-skating chimpanzee who was a star in the Ice Capades. The film stars Australian cinematographer Jeffrey Darling and adapts the book "Luke Karamazov" by Conrad Hillberry. However, the film fails to find a steady tone, veers off into bizarre subplots, and features two underwhelming performances from the talented lead duo. Set in 1964, the story begins with an in medias res development involving a dead body and flashes back a few weeks earlier. Zachary Quinto's Jim Goodwin is driving his rickety old van through Death Valley when he picks up Jacob Elordi's Bobby, a lanky and movie star-handsome stranger. Bobby claims to be an Air Force veteran who has been roaming America and is now trying to reunite with his girlfriend in Milwaukee. Jim is driving to Chicago, and the movie is heavy with symbolism about the uncertainty of America in the aftermath of the JFK assassination, the Vietnam War, and social protests. The chimp, played by an actor in motion capture (with some puppetry as well), never really seems like an actual chimp. There's something sad about the idea of a chimp taken from West Africa, forced to train for hundreds of hours, and turned into a costumed performer who is now spending most of its life in a small cage in the back of a van. Zachary Quinto delivers icy and distant work as Jim, while Jacob Elordi goes way over the top, as if he had watched "Rebel Without a Cause" a dozen times and decided to turn up the James Dean impersonation to an 11. "He Went That Way" ends as it began with a series of self-conscious and eccentric developments that feel inauthentic and forced.
- moviesfilmsreviewsinc
- May 31, 2024
- Permalink