The War Boys

The War Boys
Directed by Ronald Daniels
Produced by Carly Hugo
Matt Parker
Gill Holland
John Hart
Jeff Sine
Written by Naomi Wallace
Bruce McLeod
Starring
Benjamin Walker
Victor Rasuk
Brian J. Smith
Greg Serano
Teresa Yenque
Cheyenne Serano
Micaela Nevárez
Peter Gallagher
Music by Stephen Cullo
Cinematography Horacio Marquínez
Edited by David Leonardo
Production
company
Group Entertainment
Distributed by Snapping Turtle Films
Release dates
  • August 7, 2009 (2009-08-07)

(United States)

Running time
92 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Spanish
For other uses, see War Boys (disambiguation).

The War Boys is a 2009 American independent drama film directed by Ronald Daniels. Its screenplay was written by Naomi Wallace and Bruce McLeod, based on the play of the same name by Naomi Wallace.[1]

It stars Peter Gallagher, Victor Rasuk, Brian J. Smith and Benjamin Walker.

Production

The film was shot over a twenty-three-day span in Albuquerque, New Mexico. According to Daniels, the shoot was plagued by sandstorms and prop mishaps.[2]

Plot

Three young and bored childhood friends spend their spare time during college's spring break around the border that separates the U.S. from Mexico; living on the U.S. side of the border, they help the police patrol chase back clandestine Mexican immigrants.

Angry at his father because he won't agree to him leaving school to join the family business, David sets up a plan to steal one of his dad's trucks that should be loaded with black market TV's from Mexico and make some money by selling the goods. The father vows to avenge the theft. The three-party theft is a success and the locked truck is temporarily abandoned in a desolate area while the boys look for a purchaser.

The operation goes perfectly fine until a group of traffickers threatens the love interest of one of the lads, a Mexican woman who had occasionally helped immigrants to get fake documents, and interrogates her on the whereabouts of the cargo. The boys are still unsuspecting, but this episode makes it clear to them that the truck must contain something more trouble-worthy than just TV's, possibly drugs. Determined to get some profit anyway, they choose to get back to the wasteland, take what they can and then have the truck recovered by the traffickers via an anonymous call. It all falls out of control when they unlock the truck's storage, only to find out that it hid something far more precious than any kind of merchandise, and a mix of rage and fear leads the situation to slip completely out of their hands as the three friends confront the protagonist's father and the police. One of the guys ends up being shot and tragedy starts.

Cast

Release and reception

The film premiered at the Birmingham Gay and Lesbian Film Festival on May 30, 2009. It went on to be screened at the Woods Hole Film Festival, held in Woods Hole, Massachusetts; the San Antonio Film Festival, held in San Antonio, Texas; and the SoCal Independent Film Festival, held in Huntington Beach, California, where it won the Best Feature Film Award.[3]

See also

References

  1. Weiss, Hedy (July 11, 1999). "She's a Free Woman: MacArthur Grant Winner Charts Her Own Course". Chicago Sun-Times.
  2. Napoleon, Davi (December 23, 2009). "7Q4 Ron Daniels: On Directing Film, Opera, Theater". The Faster Times. Retrieved March 9, 2011.
  3. "2009 Winners". SoCal Independent Film Festival. Retrieved March 9, 2011.
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