Goon

2012 • 91 minutu
4,4
458 iritzi
81%
Tomatometer
Egokia
Ikus ezazu web-arakatzaile batean edo bateragarriak diren gailuetan Lortu informazio gehiago
Ez dago audio edo azpititulurik zure hizkuntzan. Hizkuntza hauetan dago erabilgarri audioa: ingelesa.

Film honi buruz

Small town bouncer Doug Glatt gets recruited to play for a minor league hockey team as the "muscle" after getting into a fist fight defending best friend Pat. Despite the fact Glatt can't skate, he becomes the hero on the team and is adored by the crowd. - © 2011 7319428 Canada Inc. & DCP (Goon) Productions Inc. All Rights Reserved. Distributed in Canada by Alliance Films. All Rights Reserved.

Balorazioak eta iritziak

4,4
458 iritzi
Eloy Hernandez
2014(e)ko otsailaren 17(a)
This movie is so good that I almost care to learn the rules of hockey, but I guess I'll never will. If you can, watch it.
Google-ren erabiltzaile bat
2012(e)ko abuztuaren 16(a)
Seann William Scott does a great job in this movie, and they also did a great job filming the hockey sequences, I'd rank this as one of the top hockey movies of all time. I would highly recommend this movie to anyone.
Ilan D. Muskat
2016(e)ko martxoaren 28(a)
The violence, you expect, but it's considerably more heartfelt and hilarious than it looks like on the tin. Doug Glatt (Scott) is a tough guy without direction who, pushed by his hockey-loving pal Pat (Jay Baruchel) to apply his prodigious aptitude for pummelling, winds up in the role of enforcer, or "goon", on the minor league Halifax Highlanders hockey team. Ross Rhea (Schreiber) is a legendary bruiser nearing the end of his career. Scott and Schreiber give exceptional performances as "goons", kind of man-with-a-code on the ice, peculiar breed of Hockey player that are there as a team's quasi-legal defensive element. At a certain point, the usually sneering, mocking coach of the Highlanders stumbles up to Glatt at a boozy post-game celebration, and blurts out "you're a knight!"; that's the idea here, that these not-too-glamorous, not-too-smart guys are upholding something by punching the snot out of other hockey players. Great supporting performances by Alison Pill, Kim Coates, Marc-André Grondin. The whole background cast have a weathered, unpretentious, plucky attitude that lifts the movie somewhere special.