Monday, July 15, 2013

Watch Fruitvale Station Online free Movie in HD Version

Watch Fruitvale Station Online free Movie in HD Version

Watch Fruitvale Station Online Oscar is shown as a caring father, an aimless pot dealer, a doting boyfriend, and a short-fused punk who angrily threatens his former grocery store supervisor. In a searing flashback scene, Oscar, whose drug-dealing landed in him in jail, gets a visitation from his mom (Octavia Spencer) on her birthday. One minute, he’s nonchalantly conversing with her about his daughter; the next, he’s embroiled in a knock-down fight with a fellow inmate; the next, he’s tearfully begging his mom for a hug as she leaves in a furious huff.

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The death of Watch Fruitvale Station Online Oscar Grant sparked days of riots and unrest in Oakland, and lots of conversations about relationships between citizens and the police. Fruitvale Station follows the 24 hours leading up to the shooting. The film won critical acclaim at this year's Sundance Film Festival, taking home the Grand Jury Prize and Audience Award. It opens in select theaters on July 12.The emotional impact of “Fruitvale Station” cannot be overstated. Without ever being forced or false, and with an amazingly honest eye and ear for detail, writer-director Ryan Coogler’s drama about a young man’s final hours is one of the most extraordinary films you’ll see this year.

It’s clear where we’re going immediately. Real-life cell phone footage from a Bay Area Rapid Transit station in the early hours of New Year’s Day 2009 shows a tense confrontation between police and a group of men handcuffed on the ground. There’s a scuffle, a gun goes off, and one of the young men falls forward. The footage goes dark. Then it’s 12 hours earlier, and 22-year-old Oscar Grant (Michael B. Jordan) is reassuring his girlfriend Sophina (Melonie Diaz) that he’s there for her and their 4-year-old daughter, Tatiana (Ariana Neal). Oscar runs errands around his hometown of Hayward, Calif., gets food for the birthday celebration for his mother Wanda (Octavia Spencer) and texts the pals he and Sophina are planning to see New Year’s fireworks with in San Francisco. Stopping at the market where he used to work, Oscar pleads with the manager to get his job back; he won’t be late again and doesn’t want to sell dope to get cash. But it’s a no-go. Picking Tatiana up from day care, he coos at and goofs with her, making sure she has the extra snack he snuck her before they both race down a driveway. In a flashback, we see Oscar in San Quentin, where Wanda scolds him for letting Sophina and his child down. The message sticks.


But being a standup guy, especially where Oscar is from, has challenges. On the way back from San Francisco, Oscar, Sophina and their friends are in a crowded train when a prison rival of Oscar’s spots him and starts a fight. It ends fast, but the police arrive and detain Oscar and three others. There’s anger and taunting as Oscar asserts he did nothing, and as he’s getting up he is shoved to the ground â€" then shot in the back. And then Coogler lets us follow as Sophina and Wanda wait and pray in a hospital. Until a now-unnecessary IV bag is tossed away. Intense as it is, we wouldn’t be as invested if Oscar wasn’t as complex as he is here, and Jordan (“Friday Night Lights”) never falters. There are split-second transitions as the charismatic, low-key Oscar has to square different sides of himself. It’s as if Jordan, sure to be an Academy Award Best Actor nominee, is negotiating minute by minute who Oscar is â€" and who he needs to be. As his mom, Spencer makes Wanda tough but loving. Early on we see her anchor her family in a warm dinner scene, and then see her do it again as they hold their breath in a hospital, facing a moment Wanda has worked so hard to avoid.

The death of Watch Fruitvale Station Online Oscar Grant sparked days of riots and unrest in Oakland, and lots of conversations about relationships between citizens and the police. Fruitvale Station follows the 24 hours leading up to the shooting. The film won critical acclaim at this year's Sundance Film Festival, taking home the Grand Jury Prize and Audience Award. It opens in select theaters on July 12.The emotional impact of “Fruitvale Station” cannot be overstated. Without ever being forced or false, and with an amazingly honest eye and ear for detail, writer-director Ryan Coogler’s drama about a young man’s final hours is one of the most extraordinary films you’ll see this year.

It’s clear where we’re going immediately. Real-life cell phone footage from a Bay Area Rapid Transit station in the early hours of New Year’s Day 2009 shows a tense confrontation between police and a group of men handcuffed on the ground. There’s a scuffle, a gun goes off, and one of the young men falls forward. The footage goes dark. Then it’s 12 hours earlier, and 22-year-old Oscar Grant (Michael B. Jordan) is reassuring his girlfriend Sophina (Melonie Diaz) that he’s there for her and their 4-year-old daughter, Tatiana (Ariana Neal). Oscar runs errands around his hometown of Hayward, Calif., gets food for the birthday celebration for his mother Wanda (Octavia Spencer) and texts the pals he and Sophina are planning to see New Year’s fireworks with in San Francisco. Stopping at the market where he used to work, Oscar pleads with the manager to get his job back; he won’t be late again and doesn’t want to sell dope to get cash. But it’s a no-go. Picking Tatiana up from day care, he coos at and goofs with her, making sure she has the extra snack he snuck her before they both race down a driveway. In a flashback, we see Oscar in San Quentin, where Wanda scolds him for letting Sophina and his child down.


But being a standup guy, especially where Oscar is from, has challenges. On the way back from San Francisco, Oscar, Sophina and their friends are in a crowded train when a prison rival of Oscar’s spots him and starts a fight. It ends fast, but the police arrive and detain Oscar and three others. There’s anger and taunting as Oscar asserts he did nothing, and as he’s getting up he is shoved to the ground â€" then shot in the back. And then Coogler lets us follow as Sophina and Wanda wait and pray in a hospital. Until a now-unnecessary IV bag is tossed away. Intense as it is, we wouldn’t be as invested if Oscar wasn’t as complex as he is here, and Jordan (“Friday Night Lights”) never falters. There are split-second transitions as the charismatic, low-key Oscar has to square different sides of himself. It’s as if Jordan, sure to be an Academy Award Best Actor nominee, is negotiating minute by minute who Oscar is â€" and who he needs to be. As his mom, Spencer makes Wanda tough but loving. Early on we see her anchor her family in a warm dinner scene, and then see her do it again as they hold their breath in a hospital, facing a moment Wanda has worked so hard to avoid.

Coogler, in his debut feature, lets glimpses of foreshadowing drop. Rattling subway cars seem ominous; Oscar comforts a dog hit by a car in a way that will be echoed. And yet “Fruitvale Station’s” power still surprises. The final shots are from a rally against police brutality held every year at the station where Oscar Grant died. A quiet, 10-year-old Tatiana is seen wiping away tears. Thanks to this incredible film, she won’t be the only one.
It’s not too soon to trumpet Michael B. Jordan as a likely 2014 Best Actor Oscar nominee. The soft-spoken, baby-faced actor â€" best known for his fine TV work in The Wire, Friday Night Lights and Parenthood â€" is that powerful in this exceptional drama.

Watch Fruitvale Station Online The true story traces the last day in the life of Oscar Grant (Jordan), a 22-year-old ex-con who was shot in the back by an Oakland transit cop in the Fruitvale train station just after New Year’s Eve in 2009. His death and the police officer's ensuing slap-on-the-wrist conviction led to massive protests throughout the area. That’s the headline. This film captures the human. Thanks to a series of quietly riveting snapshots, It's an outstanding film by any standard. Featuring a leap-to-stardom performance by Michael B. Jordan, "Fruitvale's" demonstration of how effective understated, naturalistic filmmaking is at conveying even the most incendiary reality is as hopeful as the story it tells is despairing. "Fruitvale" won both the Grand Jury Prize and the Audience Award at Sundance, as well as the Un Certain Regard Prize of the Future at Cannes, and its story is a true one, a narrative that created national shock waves when it happened.

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