Synopsis
Boy meets girl. Girl unimpressed. Boy starts band.
A boy growing up in Dublin during the 1980s escapes his strained family life by starting a band to impress the mysterious girl he likes.
Directed by John Carney
A boy growing up in Dublin during the 1980s escapes his strained family life by starting a band to impress the mysterious girl he likes.
初恋无限JAM, 싱 스트리트, Рок-н-рольщики [Sing Street (2015)], Рок-н-рольщики, 初恋这首情歌, 搖滾青春戀習曲, מועדון שנות ה-80, Sing Street: Música e Sonho, Sing Street - Zene és álom, Młodzi przebojowi, Сінґ Стріт, Синг стрит, Улица на песните, Sing Street: Este es tu momento, 初戀無限 JAM, シング・ストリート 未来へのうた, รักใครให้ร้องเพลงรัก, Gatvės muzika
Y'all really put two la la Land songs up for best original song....as if 'Drive it Like You Stole it' wasn't literally sitting right fucking there bitch,....
today's mood is wearing ugly sweaters and wire rimmed glasses while holding a rabbit and being repressed by catholicism
they wrote a character that plays every instrument & is obsessed with rabbits and expected me not to fall in love...... interesting
This review may contain spoilers. I can handle the truth.
pretty sure they died during the crossing
in retrospect, Eamon’s rabbits weren’t essential to the plot, but I’m convinced that the film’s quality would DROP without them
I'M UGLY CRYING
"It means that I'm stuck in this shithole full of morons and rapists and bullies, and I'm gonna deal with it, okay? It's just how life is. I'm gonna try and accept it and get on with it and make some art."
Sometimes you watch a movie and everything clicks. You feel like the movie was made just for you. That's what happened when I experienced John Carney's Sing Street. Why did it click with me? Perhaps, its the coming of age genre that I'm a sucker for. Or, the mid '80s setting that reminds me of my own childhood. It could be the fact I adore music in movies when performed on stage. And, the real kicker, it's set in Dublin, Ireland, and the story revolves around a group of kids who start a band and dream big. Yeah, I couldn't help but think of Alan Parker's The Commitments. A film that's super special to me, and a movie that's forever…