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    Movie Review

    Jonah Hill's Mid90s a tough but rewarding journey of troubled teen

    Alex Bentley
    Oct 25, 2018 | 4:20 pm
    Jonah Hill's Mid90s a tough but rewarding journey of troubled teen
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    Coming-of-age movies have been presented in a multitude of ways, but they're usually films with some trials and tribulations that culminate in the protagonist getting a well-earned positive ending. Mid90s, the feature writing and directing debut for Jonah Hill, has plenty of things for its main character to overcome, but it's a bit lacking in positivity.

    Stevie (Sunny Suljic) is a 13-year-old boy (who looks like he’s 10) who has a bully of a brother (Lucas Hedges) and a financially-struggling mother (Katherine Waterston). Desperate for any kind of escape from his rough home life, he starts hanging out at the local skate shop with four older boys: Ray (Na-kel Smith), Ruben (Gio Galicia), Fourth Grade (Ryder McLaughlin), and Fuckshit (Olan Prenatt).

    While he finds the camaraderie he’s craving, he also gets exposed to all sorts of things no 13-year-old should encounter on a daily basis. They include conversations where non-profanities are the exception, drinking, smoking, drug use, and more. But with little support at home, it’s perfectly clear why Stevie would gravitate toward a group full of bad influences, especially when they accept him as one of their own.

    The film is a throwback in multiple ways, starting with its use of Super 16mm film and 4:3 aspect ratio that emulates the ever-present camcorder Fourth Grade uses. But its throwback nature extends its use of child actors, most notably Suljic, in ways that you rarely see these days. Suljic is put in all manner of questionable situations, ones that should make any caring person cringe just to be witnessing.

    During those scenes, it’s very difficult to separate the actor from the character. Intellectually you know Suljic is not actually smoking, drinking, and getting beat up. But he is pretending to do so, and the line finally seems to get crossed when he has a kissing/near-sex scene with a slightly older girl. You can’t tell a story of a character being corrupted without the actor participating, but it still feels more than a little icky to be a witness to the activity.

    The skating in the film is not so notable for the skills the actors possess — although they're all actual skaters, so they have talent — as for the depth of feeling it brings for the characters. For each of them in their own way, skating and the friendships it brings gives them a kind of freedom they don’t have anywhere else in their life.

    The pulsing soundtrack by Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross and the period-appropriate music, clothes, video games, and more all help to set the mood well. After a breaking-in period with the mostly newcomer cast, the various relationships gel into ones that are wholly believable.

    Thanks to this film and several notable appearances in the past couple of years, Suljic appears well on his way toward becoming the next big child actor. He has an openness, charm, and acting talent that sets him apart and makes him the equal of people like Hedges and Waterston. Smith, a pro skater making his acting debut, shows himself to be greatly deserving of more acting opportunities.

    Mid90s will likely resonate most for those who, like Hill, grew up during that time period. But even for those who didn’t, it’s a rewarding and illuminating journey, and an auspicious filmmaking debut for the Oscar-caliber actor.

    Lucas Hedges and Sunny Suljic in Mid90s.

    Lucas Hedges and Sunny Suljic in Mid90s
    Photo by Tobin Yelland
    Lucas Hedges and Sunny Suljic in Mid90s.
    movies
    news/entertainment

    In the spotlight

    Houston reels in new rank among 10 best cities for filmmakers in 2026

    Amber Heckler
    Feb 27, 2026 | 4:00 pm
    Filmmaking, best cities for filmmakers
    Photo by Kyle Loftus on Unsplash
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    Houston has just snapped up new recognition as the No. 10 best place to live and work as a filmmaker in North America, according to MovieMaker Magazine's annual report, "The Best Places to Live and Work as a Moviemaker in 2026."

    The Bayou City has made improvements after ranking 12th in the magazine's 2025 list.

    The annual list ranks the best cities in the U.S. and Canada for individuals to live while working in the film industry, based on production spending, tax incentives, cost of living, the prevalence of "local film scenes," and additional factors. The list is divided into two categories: 25 big cities and 10 smaller cities or towns.

    The spotlighted cities are the places where the publication believes filmmakers "have the best chance of both succeeding in the famously difficult entertainment industry, and making [their] own art."

    For up-and-coming filmmakers that want to live in Texas, MovieMaker says doing it in Houston is "more sustainable than ever" thanks to incentives like the Texas Moving Image Industry Incentive Program, which increased its production grant rebate from 22.5 percent to up to 31 percent for qualified in-state spending. The report also said Houston has an "arms-wide-open" approach for filmmakers.

    "As the biggest city in Texas, and fourth biggest city in America, Houston has nearly every type of location, from cityscapes to piney woods to rolling hills to nearby farmland," the report said. "It’s close to Galveston Island and the Gulf of Mexico, and car commercials love the absence of billboard advertising."

    MovieMaker also highlighted Houston's diversity, its low cost of living compared to the national average, and its local festivals like the Houston Cinema Arts Festival and Houston Latino Film Festival.

    "The city has enough film crew for two to three sizable features, and recent shoots have included the thrillers Eleven Days, with Taylor Kitsch, and A Love, from director Courtney Glaude, Tyler Perry Studios’ executive creator of Scripted and Unscripted," the report said. "Houston is also notable for a strong contingent of films with budgets under $1 million."

    Elsewhere in Texas, Austin ranked as the No. 5 best place to live and work as a filmmaker in North America. Dallas ranked seventh, while neighboring Fort Worth ranked 12th. San Antonio appeared as No. 14, and El Paso landed 25th on the list.

    filmmakingmoviemaker magazinerankingscity lifeentertainmenthouston
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