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      Sugar

      2013 1 hr. 37 min. Drama List
      Reviews 70% 50+ Ratings Audience Score A young woman who has post traumatic stress disorder lives on the streets of Hollywood and Venice Beach. Read More Read Less

      Audience Reviews

      View All (8) audience reviews
      Audience Member This movie has been made so many times already that there seems very little left to mine. No vein of gold was struck here. Rated 2 out of 5 stars 01/25/23 Full Review Audience Member An incredible movie that depicts the day to day life of homeless youth on the streets. A film that is not Hollywood sensationalized but one that represents as close to what reality is for these homeless kids; the complexity of their lives and the interventions that can help them turn their lives around . I highly recommend this movie to anyone who is passionate and cares about the future of all kids, and homeless youth Lost in America! Rated 5 out of 5 stars 01/30/23 Full Review Audience Member What a great film! Absolutely incredible performances, and it sheds light on the issue of teen homelessness, something that's not talked about enough in this country. I heard the film is based on the director's own experiences living on the streets, which definitely gave it added credibility. Can't recommend highly enough! Rated 5 out of 5 stars 02/14/23 Full Review Audience Member Totally loved this film. Venice Beach really brought this movie out. Great Cast, solid performances and great story. Wasn't cheesy as expected and didn't have the ending I had predicted either. Great Movie! Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/08/23 Full Review Audience Member I saw this film in Los Angeles in theaters. I really enjoyed it. Didn't expect this, thought it was going to be something else. Guess you don't expect something gritty from Shenae Grimes and Corbin Bleu, but I think she's hot so.... But I was really surprised. Whoever cast them had balls. This is a really good film and just goes to show you can't judge a book by it's cover, or even a film. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/25/23 Full Review Audience Member November 22, 2013 Does anyone ever choose to be homeless? That's the running question throughout "Sugar," a raw, cynical film about young people living on the streets of Los Angeles. Despite the hardships of their situation, the characters are relatively upbeat, probably because they never feel like they're alone, which is both a good thing and a sad thing in this case. The story follows a close-knit group of adults in their early 20s and one minor as they parade around Venice Beach with no clear direction in mind. Day to day, they either hang out on random corners, along the L.A. river basin, or they take the bus to and from Hollywood, all while relying on free handouts from strangers and working odd jobs to survive. They don't seem to care about how they look since they mostly go unnoticed anyway. Each comes from a broken home, or not home at all, and to them their freedom is their most important possession, and in an effort to feel like they're in control of their lives, they'll tell you this is the choice they've made. But when it comes Sugar (Shenae Grimes), we get the sense her homelessness is not something she ran toward, but rather the result of her running away from something else. The opening scene more or less tells us what this "something else" is, which I won't reveal here, but Sugar's recollection of the tragic event gives her nightmares and has her waking up scared and anxious. Perhaps this is why she figures it doesn't matter where she sleeps, since her nightmares and inner demons will follow her wherever she goes. At the present moment, she sleeps under a bridge next to her boyfriend Marshall (Marshall Allman), a drug addict with a short fuse. Despite his small size, he's ready to fight anybody who gives him the slightest look of condescension, and credit to Allman for convincing us his character would be merciless, even before he proves it during a violent scene involving a skateboard. The other members of Sugar's posse include a minor named Ronnie (Austin Williams), who's just about 15 or 16 and whom Sugar claims as her responsibility, if only because it give her purpose; Free (William Peltz), who doesn't mind living his days on the streets so long as he can sleep in a warm bed with a different girl every night, which he's managed to do so far; and Sketch (Corbin Bleu), an artist with a slow mind but a sweet heart. One of the ways Sugar makes money is by talking to a counselor named Bishop (Wes Studi) at a youth shelter. He pays her to document her life on the streets and write about it in a journal, perhaps in an effort to use her as a successful case study and get her and other kids like her off the street, hopefully reconnecting them to their families and society. Sugar has a family who loves her, including a concerned uncle (Angus Macfadyen), and we know she's smart and capable enough to make something of herself, but fear, grief and sadness have paralyzed her from taking the steps to go back home. It's easier for her to simply hide and laugh things off, but deep down she knows she can't do this forever. Yes, she's probably right that living day to day on the streets is easier than taking full responsibility--like working a job, dealing with people, making important decisions, etc.--but the long-term effects of such a lifestyle eventually wear on you, or at least they do to someone as bright as Sugar, and she knows it. We've seen enough movies of this nature to know it will likely take a tragic or near-tragic event to force the protagonist to come to grips with her past. The overall trajectory of the story and ensuing drama are mostly familiar and inevitable, which is not to say they're ineffectual, but the heart of the film stems from its honest, unblinking observations of its characters and the dialogue they share, which likely underlines the bonds real-life homeless people form. On this level, it feels very true. The director and co-writer, Rotimi Rainwater, supposedly based it on his own experiences and he's made a deeply personal project. "Sugar" is not the most professionally made movie, and its low-budget and somewhat inexperienced cast are sometimes distracting and interrupt the momentum of the storytelling, but its substance and the particularly strong performance by Grimes raise it above just a simple cautionary tale. Despite the overly manipulative ending, we truly care about the heroine and hope she finds her way home, or at least a place where she chooses to be and no longer has to bear nightmares. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 02/03/23 Full Review Read all reviews Post a rating

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      Critics Reviews

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      Inkoo Kang Los Angeles Times As a whole, the film's characters touchingly illustrate the tolls of living with unresolved trauma and chronic uncertainty, as well as the solidarity and relative freedom this community of outcasts enjoys. Nov 21, 2013 Full Review Read all reviews

      Movie Info

      Synopsis A young woman who has post traumatic stress disorder lives on the streets of Hollywood and Venice Beach.
      Director
      Rotimi Rainwater
      Executive Producer
      Tony Aloupis, Elliott Broidy, Rachel Grate, Joe Krieg
      Screenwriter
      Tony Aloupis, Rotimi Rainwater
      Genre
      Drama
      Original Language
      English
      Release Date (Streaming)
      Jul 26, 2020