SummaryWhen a teenage boy goes missing in a small town already devastated by a fatal mining accident, three strangers find themselves drawn together in a tangle of secrets, lies, and the collective grief of the community. Reeling from the disappearance of her son, Diane (Elizabeth Banks) finds herself drifting away from her husband (Josh Lucas), a minin... Read More
Directed By:Sara Colangelo
Written By:Sara Colangelo
Little Accidents
Metascore
Mixed or Average
56
User score
Mixed or Average
5.3
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Metascore
Mixed or Average
33% Positive
6 Reviews
6 Reviews
61% Mixed
11 Reviews
11 Reviews
6% Negative
1 Review
1 Review
Dec 8, 2014
91
Little Accidents takes its time, but Holbrook’s confident performance makes his story riveting throughout, reflecting both the gravity of his situation and the enormous consequences his choice will have on the entire town — certain individuals in particular.
Jan 9, 2015
75
A movingly authentic exploration of a working-class milieu and the psychological and economic trauma that ripples through a town in the wake of a tragic accident.
Jan 15, 2015
60
Colangelo shows a mature levelheadedness in depicting how close-knit communities fall and rise together.
Dec 8, 2014
60
Features a standout central performance by newcomer Boyd Holbrook (“The Host”), but suffers from predictable plotting and shallow characterizations that keep the movie from ever transcending the obvious.
Jan 15, 2015
50
The net effect of the messy bedroom sheets, the marital squabbling and lachrymose, emotional bloodletting is to turn a tragedy into an atmospheric backdrop for three isolated souls, all of whom might have started out considerably less lonely if the movie had a firmer grasp on the world in which they live.
Jan 15, 2015
50
There’s nothing here that Green or his own cinematic forebear, Terrence Malick, haven’t done better elsewhere.
Jan 16, 2015
38
Little Accidents is quietly earnest, handsomely produced, and too dramatically inert and dogged by the commonplace to make much of an impact beyond conveying the dreariness (as opposed to the dread) of life in a coal-mining town.
User score
Mixed or Average
0% Positive
0 Ratings
0 Ratings
100% Mixed
4 Ratings
4 Ratings
0% Negative
0 Ratings
0 Ratings
Jul 18, 2017
4
In a small mining town, an accident has killed several workers, leaving a lone survivor, Amos Jenkins (Boyd Holbrook). The townspeople are furious and blame the mines owner, the towns wealthiest resident, a cold, heartless man, who many suspect caused the accident with his shortcuts and cheap business practices. The town is out for blood, but only one of them, literally, as soon after the accident, the mine owners teenage son turns up dead. Little Accidents is yet another example of these dark modern noir type films, that have become so popular the past decade, and normally I am a huge fan of them. This film however, may have had the modern noir feeling, but actually had the old noir story line AKA slow, strange, and confusing. I chose this film because one of it's stars is Jacob Lofland, who at just 21 years old, has only been acting for 5 years, but he is a natural in every sense of the word. Every performance he has given has been better than the one before it. His talent has lead him to leading roles in the Maze Runner series, as well as the AMC show, The Son. Being as fond of his style as I am, I decide to go back and watch his filmography from the beginning, and that's where I found Little Accidents. While Lofland's part was minor, you are still able to see some of the skills that brought him to where he is today. Paired with Elizabeth Banks and Josh Lucas, this was one fantastic cast, featured in a terrific setting, and I was sure this film was a can't miss, but the story had other ideas. Little Accidents was all over the place, some of things that happened have nothing to do with the story, and make little sense. The Bottom Line, don't let a terrific cast fool you, this film is slow and all over the place. The mystery, isn't much of one and the story will leave you scratching your head.
Production Company:
- Amplify
- Maiden Voyage Pictures
- Archer Gray
- TideRock Media
- Soaring Flight Productions
- MindSmack Productions
Release Date:Jan 16, 2015
Duration:1 h 45 m
Tagline:The truth is rarely pure and never simple.
Awards
Milano International Film Festival Awards (MIFF Awards)
• 6 Nominations
Hamptons International Film Festival
• 1 Win & 2 Nominations
Seattle International Film Festival
• 2 Nominations




























