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Mud: Movie Review

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Mud is a striking coming-of-age story about a young teenager who comes into contact with a man fleeing the law and a powerful family looking for revenge. Set in a small town in Arkansas, the story and characters are well done, with some positive content, but the movie is a little too long and contains some negative content requiring caution.

Fourteen-year-old Ellis lives with his parents on a makeshift houseboat on the Mississippi River. He and his friend, Neckbone, sneak out early one morning to visit an island nearby, where a boat has landed in a group of trees after a flood. They find a scruffy-looking superstitious man named Mud (Matthew McConaughey) living out on the island. He’s been living in the boat and says he’s waiting for someone. Mud tells the boys he’ll let them have the boat if they get him some food. Ellis agrees, but Neckbone is suspicious.

Sure enough, Ellis learns that the police are looking for Mud. Mud admits he killed a man, but that the man seduced Mud’s former girlfriend, got her pregnant and beat her up so that she lost the baby. He says he’s waiting for her to arrive so they can escape together. The dead man’s father and brother, however, have sent a team of bounty hunters after Mud. So, Mud convinces Ellis and Neckbone to help him fix the boat in the trees and take it down, so he and his girlfriend can use it to escape. Aiding that process is the fact that the girlfriend actually shows up in town one day.

It’s the characters that matter in Mud the movie. The story focuses on Ellis, the young teenager who’s enamored with Mud’s romantic story of eternal love, especially since it seems that his own parents are breaking up. This turns the movie into a romantic adventure set within a coming-of-age story.

The performances in this movie help sell the story. The child actors are really good. One of them actually hails from Arkansas and the other comes from Texas. Matthew McConaughey (who hails from Texas himself) is very good in the title role.

However, the story goes on a little long. That’s probably partly because Mud never encounters the bounty hunters and the former girlfriend until the end. So, the movie turns out to be 130 minutes long.

Mud has a Romantic worldview. It’s set in a world where a young boy’s illusions and ideals are in danger of being shattered. Young Ellis, the young teenager at the center of the story, is looking for an example of love in which he can believe. Even his attempt to woo an older girl goes sour (one scene briefly shows him kissing the girl). On the positive side, there are a couple heartfelt scenes between Ellis and his father. Despite the breakup of the family, the father tells Ellis to honor and obey his mother.

Mud has too much PG-13 foul language. The young teenage boys also share a couple crude lines about female breasts in two scenes, and there’s an obligatory but exciting shootout with the bounty hunters at the end.


NOTE from Dr. Ted Baehr, publisher of Movieguide Magazine. For more information from a Christian perspective, order the latest Movieguide Magazine by calling 1-800-899-6684(MOVI) or visit our website at www.movieguide.org. Movieguide is dedicated to redeeming the values of Hollywood by informing parents about today's movies and entertainment and by showing media executives and artists that family-friendly and even Christian-friendly movies do best at the box office year in and year out. Movieguide now offers an online subscription to its magazine version, at www.movieguide.org. The magazine, which comes out 25 times a year, contains many informative articles and reviews that help parents train their children to be media-wise consumers.

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MOVIEGUIDE® was founded in 1985 by Dr. Ted Baehr, past president of the Episcopal Radio & Television Foundation and former director of the Television Center at the City University of New York. MOVIEGUIDE® is affiliated with the Christian Film & Television Commission® ministry (CFTVC). Both MOVIEGUIDE® and CFTVC are dedicated to redeeming the values of the entertainment industry, according to biblical principles, by influencing industry executives and artists and by informing and educating the public about the influence of the entertainment media and about how to train their families to become