Scott tem sido um caso de desenvolvimento interrompido desde a morte do seu pai. Ele passa os dias fumando maconha e sonhando em ser um tatuador até que os eventos o forçam a lidar com sua d... Ler tudoScott tem sido um caso de desenvolvimento interrompido desde a morte do seu pai. Ele passa os dias fumando maconha e sonhando em ser um tatuador até que os eventos o forçam a lidar com sua dor e dar os primeiros passos na vida.Scott tem sido um caso de desenvolvimento interrompido desde a morte do seu pai. Ele passa os dias fumando maconha e sonhando em ser um tatuador até que os eventos o forçam a lidar com sua dor e dar os primeiros passos na vida.
- Prêmios
- 3 vitórias e 24 indicações no total
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Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesSteve Buscemi, who plays the veteran firefighter Papa in this movie, really did serve as a firefighter for a period during his early 20s. In a 2000 Salon interview with Stephen Lemons, Buscemi said he was with Engine 55 in Manhattan's Little Italy neighborhood from 1980 to 1984, when he quit to pursue acting full-time. After the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001, Buscemi (by then a well-known movie star) returned to Engine 55 to help search through the rubble of the World Trade Center looking for survivors or remains. In June 2020, Buscemi told Entertainment Weekly's Derek Lawrence that The King of Staten Island was the first time in his acting career that he had ever actually played a firefighter.
- Erros de gravaçãoAccording to the timeline of the movie, a large part of this would've taken place during late fall to winter months. (Plans to visit Ray's parents for thanksgiving, Scott talking to his sister at the Halloween party, etc.) However, the weather is summer like the entire movie.
- Citações
Scott Carlin: Oh I trained her in the car. She's not going to break.
- Cenas durante ou pós-créditosDedicated to the Memory of Scott Davidson
- ConexõesFeatured in The Bigger Bubble (2025)
- Trilhas sonorasJust What I Am
Written by Kid Cudi (as Scott Mescudi) and Chip tha Ripper (as Charles Worth)
Performed by Kid Cudi featuring Chip tha Ripper
Courtesy of Republic Records
Under license from Universal Music Enterprises
Avaliação em destaque
I have never been a Pete Davidson fan, and when I've seen him on SNL in recent years, I never thought he was funny--or I thought maybe I was too old to find his comedy style appealing. I did feel sympathy for him, as I know he has dealt with depression in recent years. I think "The King of Staten Island" taps into this, and Pete's lead character, Scott, seems closely based on his own experiences. Davidson co-wrote the screenplay; Judd Apatow directs. The film is polished and features a solid cast of veteran actors (Marisa Tomei, Steve Buscemi, Bill Burr) to support the young star.
Like Davidson, Scott's father was a firefighter who died when he was a young boy. Scott seems lost and aimless; he smokes a lot of pot; has an awkward on-and-off relationship with a neighborhood girl; and he doesn't know what to do with his life, other than possibly becoming a tattoo artist. He has artistic talent. Scott resents that his widowed mother has begun seeing a divorced firefighter, and the two men clash.
"The King of Staten Island" felt very relatable and authentic, and it focuses on a subject that has been overlooked by Hollywood in recent years---the "forgotten" working- or lower-middle class white young men searching for some meaning in their lives, some direction and purpose. Many, like the main character here, turn to drugs because they really don't know what else to do.
Scott's firefighter father died in the line of work--just as Davidson's firefighter father died on 9/11. He needs a father figure, a male role model -- and our society seems to scoff at this idea these days. Staten Island is a typical middle-class/working-class, mostly white/Italian/Irish sort of community where the residents are hard-working, family-oriented people, but nothing like the glitzy, snooty hipsters a ferry ride away in Manhattan or Brooklyn. There used to be so many great American movies about people just like Scott and his family--"Working Girl," "Nobody's Fool" and "Beautiful Girls" just off the top of my head. Recently, Hollywood seems uninterested in their stories. Yet Scott's story seems universal.
The most inspiring scenes in "The King of Staten Island" take place in the firehouse where Scott's father once worked. The firefighters are white and black, male and female, and they all work and eat and laugh together as a sort of family. Here, we see the beating heart of community, and we see the value of hard work and service. Buscemi was a NYC firefighter in real life, another element that lends "The King of Staten Island" authenticity.
Davidson does a fine job in a comic/dramatic starring role as a lost, goofy, horny young guy who doesn't really know how to take the next steps to becoming a man. He may be playing himself in many ways, but his performance hits the mark. Overall, a very touching, inspiring movie that you should watch.
Like Davidson, Scott's father was a firefighter who died when he was a young boy. Scott seems lost and aimless; he smokes a lot of pot; has an awkward on-and-off relationship with a neighborhood girl; and he doesn't know what to do with his life, other than possibly becoming a tattoo artist. He has artistic talent. Scott resents that his widowed mother has begun seeing a divorced firefighter, and the two men clash.
"The King of Staten Island" felt very relatable and authentic, and it focuses on a subject that has been overlooked by Hollywood in recent years---the "forgotten" working- or lower-middle class white young men searching for some meaning in their lives, some direction and purpose. Many, like the main character here, turn to drugs because they really don't know what else to do.
Scott's firefighter father died in the line of work--just as Davidson's firefighter father died on 9/11. He needs a father figure, a male role model -- and our society seems to scoff at this idea these days. Staten Island is a typical middle-class/working-class, mostly white/Italian/Irish sort of community where the residents are hard-working, family-oriented people, but nothing like the glitzy, snooty hipsters a ferry ride away in Manhattan or Brooklyn. There used to be so many great American movies about people just like Scott and his family--"Working Girl," "Nobody's Fool" and "Beautiful Girls" just off the top of my head. Recently, Hollywood seems uninterested in their stories. Yet Scott's story seems universal.
The most inspiring scenes in "The King of Staten Island" take place in the firehouse where Scott's father once worked. The firefighters are white and black, male and female, and they all work and eat and laugh together as a sort of family. Here, we see the beating heart of community, and we see the value of hard work and service. Buscemi was a NYC firefighter in real life, another element that lends "The King of Staten Island" authenticity.
Davidson does a fine job in a comic/dramatic starring role as a lost, goofy, horny young guy who doesn't really know how to take the next steps to becoming a man. He may be playing himself in many ways, but his performance hits the mark. Overall, a very touching, inspiring movie that you should watch.
- PeachesIR
- 16 de mar. de 2021
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- How long is The King of Staten Island?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- Países de origem
- Centrais de atendimento oficiais
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- O Rei de Staten Island
- Locações de filme
- Empresas de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
Bilheteria
- Orçamento
- US$ 35.000.000 (estimativa)
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 2.180.452
- Tempo de duração2 horas 16 minutos
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 2.39 : 1
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