Safe to say this movie won't appeal to everybody. It has an unscripted feel to it, more like a slice of life or stream of consciousness experience on a wide scale. The central character is Vic (Chris Galust),a shuttle van driver who has to consistently divert his attention moment to moment like a human pinball. The film is populated with a cast of Russian immigrant retirees, an assortment of mentally and physically disabled people, and throws in a civil rights protest along the way. Some of it is funny, but you have to wonder at times if the humor isn't a result of taking advantage of the handicapped. The film makers utilize a gimmick in which the picture, mostly in color, at one point goes black and white as Vic's van comes in contact with a protest demonstration, returning to color right after. Another reviewer makes the point that virtually all of the writers offering '10' ratings with an IMDb review for the movie have only this one review in their profile. I clicked on more than a half dozen user names to verify and that apparently is the case where folks associated with the picture are more than likely promoting it. The one comparing it to the work of Fellini and Truffaut is a dead give away. Without them, the rating would plunge well below 5.0.
Give Me Liberty
2019
Action / Comedy / Drama
Give Me Liberty
2019
Action / Comedy / Drama
Keywords: emigrantdisabled person
Plot summary
In this freewheeling comedy, medical transport driver Vic risks his job to shuttle a group of rowdy seniors and a Russian boxer to a funeral, dragging clients like Tracy, a young woman with ALS, along for the ride.
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
Director
Top cast
Tech specs
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"I should be there in ten."
Passionate But Aggravating
Anyone who has the ability to say "no" to people who try to take advantage of them will find this movie at times intolerable.
I don't happen to come from an overbearing family who expect me to orient my entire life around helping them, so I had trouble relating to the main character in this movie or to feel any sympathy for him. That main character is Vic, a young man who spends his days shuttling people with disabilities to one place and another. Some of these people are sweet and kind, but many of them are jerks. On the particular day on which this movie is set, he also agrees as a favor to taxi a group of old, horrible people to a funeral (apparently taxis, Lyfts, and public transportation don't exist in Milwaukee) and adds Dima, the movie's most noxious character, to his passenger list. Dima is a gross, hairy dude who aggressively makes sexual advances at every woman he comes across (Vic's sister among them) despite being told "no," until every woman eventually finds him so irresistible that they give in (nice message). The film is one prolonged note of chaos, as Vic valiantly tries to go about his duties while everyone yells at him, complains about how he's doing things, and makes you wonder why he doesn't drive them all off a cliff.
Vic also has a mom, who calls him over to her apartment to move a sofa in the middle of his work day and then proceeds to berate him about how he has no direction in life and should get a better job.
The film has the feel of a personal memoir, and I'm assuming this was life to a certain extent as experienced by it's writer and director. But I spent the whole movie wondering why Vic didn't just grow a pair, kick all of the freeloaders off his van (or better yet, never offer to give them a ride in the first place) and get on with his life.
There are good things about the movie. It's assuredly directed (except for the ending, an implausible mess of a scene set at a jail protest) and it's well acted by a group of unknowns. It clearly wants to bring awareness to the marginalized, and I welcome any stories that put front and center those who society normally pushes to the fringes. But it's too undisciplined and one-note to wholeheartedly recommend.
Grade: B
A road movie, but all the roads are in Milwaukee
Give Me Liberty (2019) was co-written and directed by Kirill Mikhanovsky. Chris Galust lays Vic, a young man who drives a medical transport van. Lauren 'Lolo' Spencer portrays Tracy, one of his passengers. Maxim Stoyanov is Dima, a giant of a man who may or may not be what he says he is.
The problem for Vic is that he does more for his clients than just drive them--he's sort of their social worker as well. He also does more for his grandfather's friends, who are older Jewish people from Russia, and who need transportation.
As the van goes careening down the Milwaukee streets, Vic keeps telling the dispatcher "I'm going to Eisenhower." I thought Eisenhower was a highway, but instead it's the Eisenhower Center vocational training program that helps people with disabilities. Some of the scenes are shot within the Eisenhower Center, and they present the clients in a positive and respectful way. That's one of the strengths of the movie.
The film has some funny scenes, but it also has some disturbing scenes of violent interactions between police and protestors. So, although in the very basic sense it's a love story, it's not for everyone.
Give Me Liberty would work well in a theater, but it was OK on the small screen. It has a dismal IMDb rating of 6.6. It's not a great movie, but I thought that rating was too low, and rated it 8.