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Dadetown

Play trailer Dadetown Released Sep 18, 1995 1h 32m Drama Play Trailer Watchlist
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Tomatometer 4 Reviews 100% Popcornmeter Fewer than 50 Ratings
This faux documentary follows the blue-collar citizens of a fictional upstate New York town. Dadetown residents become suspect when a new company, API Technologies, moves in and brings a new workforce with it. As fancy coffee shops and yuppies descend on the community, the traditionalist locals become more and more disturbed. Then, when Dadetown's oldest business and biggest employer looks like it might go under, the Dadetown natives realize their town may no longer belong to them.

Critics Reviews

View All (4) Critics Reviews
Daniel M. Kimmel Variety Cast of unknowns bring the various characters to vivid life, which may be the problem. This plays so realistically that viewers may not get the satire... Apr 29, 2005 Full Review Roger Ebert Chicago Sun-Times Here's my best advice: If Dadetown sounds interesting, program a double feature of Roger & Me and Gates of Heaven and really be amazed. Rated: 2/4 Nov 13, 2001 Full Review James Berardinelli ReelViews Rated: 3.5/4 Nov 13, 2001 Full Review Dennis Schwartz Dennis Schwartz Movie Reviews Russ Hexter, the 27-year-old writer-director, unexpectedly died of an aortic aneurysm shortly after shooting the innovative film... Rated: B Jan 1, 2000 Full Review Read all reviews

Audience Reviews

View All (5) audience reviews
Bob R There is nothing like it that I have ever seen. Problem is ... you can no longer find it anywhere. Rated 5 out of 5 stars 03/13/23 Full Review Audience Member Dadetown is a "meta-documentary" about small-town America in the 1990s. Is a rural, close-knit community still the "American dream", or, with the closing of factories, has it become a kind of American nightmare? A stunning first feature from director Russ Hexter, Dadetown leads to an unforgettable revelation during the closing credits. Dadetown highlights a problem afflicting communities and individuals all across the country as the face of business undergoes a change. We can no longer rely on our employers to provide for us. No jobs are safe. Whether in Dadetown or New York City, the bottom line worker is always the first victim of middle-management judgment errors and upper management selfishness. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 01/12/23 Full Review Audience Member One of the damnedest things I've ever seen. This film should be much better known. I'm also surprised that no films have followed in its footsteps. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/20/23 Full Review Audience Member Succeeds at something most mocumentaries don't; it feels authentic. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/11/23 Full Review Audience Member I've recently resolved to finally get around to watching the massive amount of films I've been taping off of various cable channels for the past few years. This may not sound like a huge resolution, but when you've got dozens and dozens of tapes filled with EP-recorded movies that you don't even remember thinking about staring at you from the shelves all around you, it can be a bit intimidating. I started the mammoth project off this morning with [i]Dadetown[/i], a documentary about a small town in the midst of something of a civil war. To be fair, I can't really give a total critique of the film on here, as the revelations in the final reel change the tone and meaning of the film so considerably that any real analysis would involve me spoiling the ending. And I don't want to do that, because [i]Dadetown[/i]'s final moments are so shocking that they'd best remain a secret until you see them. Don't go to the IMDb entry on it either, unless you want the ending to be plainly known. In fact, it seems that every single review of the film reveals the ending. But I won't. Because I'm like that. Dadetown is the sort of "small town, USA" mimicked in [i]Waiting for Guffman[/i], a place of tradition and loyalty to the Gorman company, the sole major manufacturer in town that employs most of the male residents. At the beginning of the film, a newer face, the white-collar telecommunications company API, has emerged in the city. While the new company has been there nearly two and a half years, the town is clearly divided, and the two sides rarely intermingle. When the Gorman company begins laying off workers, panic strikes the blue-collar part of town and someone begins trashing properties of API employees. It soon becomes obvious that Gorman is on its' way out, and tensions between the various factions rise. Spoilers below: [color=seagreen]But the whole thing is a hoax. [i]Dadetown[/i] is, in fact, a mockumentary, as revealed during the closing credits. Unlike other mockumentaries, it does a fine job of portraying everything as "real" and doesn't go for jokes, but rather social meaning. Just because the events depicted in [i]Dadetown[/i] [i]didn't[/i] happen doesn't mean they [i]couldn't, [/i]and Russ Hexler does a great job at doing kind of a fictional counterpart to [i]American Dream[/i] or[i] Book Wars[/i]. Sure, some set-ups look awfully suspicious, like a drunken laid-off worker attacking the camera crew until it turns black, and it could be argued that, with few characters that are actually followed through any sort of a story arc, there is little reason to really get attached to anyone in particular. But to the credit of the actors, nobody comes off as completely stereotypical or contrived, and if you're not a cynical avid movie goer, you may be pleasantly surprised by the twist.[/color] Dadetown is certainly worth a look, especially for this with a bizarre fascination for either small-town economics or documentary filmmaking. While never released on video in the U.S., it shows up intermittently on IFC. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 01/25/23 Full Review Read all reviews
Dadetown

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Movie Info

Synopsis This faux documentary follows the blue-collar citizens of a fictional upstate New York town. Dadetown residents become suspect when a new company, API Technologies, moves in and brings a new workforce with it. As fancy coffee shops and yuppies descend on the community, the traditionalist locals become more and more disturbed. Then, when Dadetown's oldest business and biggest employer looks like it might go under, the Dadetown natives realize their town may no longer belong to them.
Director
Russ Hexter
Producer
Jim Carden
Screenwriter
Russ Hexter, John Housley
Production Co
Castle Hill Productions
Genre
Drama
Original Language
English
Release Date (Theaters)
Sep 18, 1995, Original
Box Office (Gross USA)
$9.9K
Runtime
1h 32m