Well, you can't knock his reading material selection |
The Alamo Drafthouse was really pushing Midnight Special (2016), and so I saw the trailers a few times over the past couple of months. In general, they at least piqued my curiosity, and in a weekend when I wanted to get out of the house and I was opting out of superherodom, I decided to give this one a whirl. A college pal I've mostly lost touch with did the score for this movie, so I had all the more incentive to see this one, I guess.
The movie is uncomplicated, and were it not for a few heart-stopping moments, I'd say it was completely safe as family fare. But, really, I'd advise for kids 13 and up. What violence does occur is handled with something like the shock of reality ( I assume. I don't get wrapped up in gun-play as often as you think an IT manager would.), which works very, very well in the movie, but not something for the wee ones.
The movie begins in-media-res, Alton Meyer is the subject of Amber Alerts across Texas, local news stations are putting up pictures of his birth father, Roy (Michael Shannon), as the abductor. We learn that Meyer was the adopted son of a charismatic preacher (Sam Shepard) in a small commune/ cult of religious fundamentalists - based on the very real folks you see sometimes coming into town in Austin in their colorful dresses out of the 19th Century (and sometimes bonnets).* They aren't anti-technology, but they certainly keep to themselves.