Weekends (2017) Poster

(2017)

User Reviews

Review this title
9 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
8/10
Real-to-life Depiction of Divorce - Recommended for Parents, Not Kids
jamuckley6 May 2019
"Weekends" is an animated short film written and directed by Trevor Jimenez. It was nominated for an Oscar in 2018. While it lost to Oscar heavyweight, Pixar's "Bao," the film was both thought-provoking and realistic from my point-of-view, as a recently divorced dad, figuring out weekends with my three kids. Jimenez made the film through the co-op program at Pixar, which permits employees to use some company resources to make their own independent short films.

I feel like I can identify with both the father and mother depicted in the film. Despite the circumstances, the new reality of the divorced parent is still one of hope. There is hope beyond a divorce. Life changes, there are adjustments to be made, new work to be done when you move on to any new endeavor. But ultimately, there is hope.

I would recommend this film for divorced parents, but not necessarily for younger kids. The film is rated "R." There is a scene that implies domestic violence (not shown) between the divorced mother and a love interest leading to the end of that relationship. This can be both frightening and unsettling to kids. Some of surreal dream sequences of how the child perceives the events occurring around him are also disturbing.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Not Suitable For People Who Might Need It
boblipton10 February 2019
This Oscar-nominated short offers a surrealistic point-of-view movie as a small boy spends the weekdays with his mother, who is studying to be an accountant, and the weekends with his father, who has cool samurai swords and plays video games with his son. These sequences are interspersed with dream sequences of flying. Each parent tries to move on with life, which causes the protagonist some alarm, but in the end, nothing much happens and life goes on.

Has animation entered its anecdotage? That period of long, rambling discourses that seem to start out well and pertinently, continue with some interesting-seeming details and then after a white, end with nothing at all being different? Because that's what happens here. This is quite unlike being in a phone conversation with my great-aunt Esther, who would keep you on the phone for hours. Every forty-five minutes like clockwork, she would say "You know what I mean?" When you replied "Yes, Esther" to prove you hadn't hung up on her, she would switch from that interminable story to a different endless one.

Perhaps this short might have some value to kids whose parents are going through a divorce, wondering if the world will ever move on. However, the program at the IFC where I saw this notes "Not suitable for children under 8". So much for that thought.
3 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Animation was great, slow story
james-patrick-732-46346824 February 2019
Wasn't the best out of the 5 nominated. I actually preferred tweet tweet over this one.
1 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Passion Project from a Talented Filmmaker
andrewestrella6 December 2018
The best animated short film of the 20th Animation Show of Shows. Simply put, this is the story of a young Asian boy who struggles with his parent's separation, and has to transition between being with his father on the weekends and his mother during the week. It is a fairly sad film, accompanied by Gymnipedie No.1 all throughout, but it has both its scary and comedic moments as well.

Stunning animation, beautiful music, and a relatable story, Weekends is a film that you should definitely find the time to watch, maybe this weekend?

Hoping this wins the 2018 Academy Award for Best Animation Short Film.
5 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Somber...very, very somber...and a little tough to follow since there is no dialog.
planktonrules3 April 2022
"Weekends" was nominated for Best Animated Short, but like most of the time these days, this independent film lost out to a Disney or Pixar short (in this case, "Bao" by Pixar).

The story is told without words and a few times I felt confused as it wasn't always easy to tell what was happening (especially with the father at the end) and the film was incredibly somber...made more so by the lovely but depressing music by the French composer, Satie. The film consists of recollections by a child about being passed from parent to parent on weekends because of a divorce.

So is it any good? Well, I loved the hand-drawn animation....it was unique looking and very nice. As for the story, however, it just felt as if I needed more...more to understand what was occurring. It is not an easy film to love but it is well made.
0 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Simplistic, masterful storytelling
loganholley9 February 2019
EDIT: I made a couple of factual mistakes that have been fixed, or should be fixed. Also, I fixed some incorrect phrasing. I'm sad this lost to Pixar, but whatever, it's still good on its own merits.

I just saw the 2019 Oscar Nominated Shorts last night -- both Live Action and Animated -- as is tradition for me. While the Live Action shorts were rather meh (both of the ones from Canada were beautiful, poignant, thought-provoking, and just as haunting; the one from the US was unnerving while also showcasing relevant political commentary and a surfeit of black humor; the rest of them were not so good), I was very impressed with the animated shorts this year. Usually, when I go to see these things, I'm more excited for the Live Action shorts because that's where most of the meat lies. Typically, the animated shorts are a fun diversion, but rarely do they engage me as much as this year's had. As much as I like Pixar, I swear, if they win again just because they have another cute short without a whole lot of substance, I'm going to pull my hair. If Weekends wins, however, I won't just be surprised, I'll be happy.

Weekends is a beautiful, harrowing look into the mind of a boy whose parents have split up. On the weekends, he visits his father, who drives him to Seattle while blasting Dire Straight's song Money For Nothing. While hanging out with his father is fun, it quickly becomes apparent why the boy's parents are no longer together. His father, an Asian-American, is big into Japanese Culture, spends long nights watching cheesy movies on the television while downing snacks, and wakes up early sometimes to play Video Games. Meanwhile, the kid's mother is a quiet, reserved person who slowly plays the piano every morning, studies accounting, and doesn't have a single television in sight, relying instead on the imagination of the kid to bring him fun and joy. In between his visits to and from Seattle are nightmares that grow increasingly surreal, disturbing, and bizarre.

Weekends uses the most of its simple set-up to deliver one of the most personal experiences I've ever seen from an animated short. Without using a single line of dialog, a single moment of text-on-screen, it tells its story in a way that respects the viewer's intelligence by allowing them to piece things together. It's very simplistic, but there's a certain mastery on display here that's hard to ignore.

It would be remiss of me to not also mention the excellent animation. While far from smooth, the stylistic approach not only fits with the short on a tonal level, but also helps draw the viewer in. It almost feels like a really good child's painting at times, one of the ones that holds up even into adulthood. It's unlike any of the other animated shorts and in a very delightful way.

Overall, this is my pick for this year's animated short. Seeing it in the theater was a magical experience and I can't wait to see what the guy who made this does next. If it's as good or any better than Weekends, then this is certainly someone to keep an eye on.
4 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Somewhat captivating in its own right
Horst_In_Translation17 February 2019
Warning: Spoilers
"Weekends" is an American short film from 2017 that has no spoken language, so you can watch and enjoy it wherever you are from. The writer and director is Trevor Jimenez and he managed to win a great deal of awards for this one and score even more nominations and the highlight is probably that it did get in at the Oscars and thanks to its strong win/nomination ratio and also the recent Annie Award win, it may be the best bet to upset Pixar's genuinely mediocre entry Bao this year. I still don't think it will happen though, but we shall see. Now for the film itself, it is one of these movies that yu have to watch at least twice and still won't know a whole lot that is going on in here. And I am not just talking about the really big metaphors like the dream sequence involving the candleman that burns everything down eventually or the red horse, but also minor moments. My favorite parts were probably the ones when the kid moves from father to mother and back because this is what the title refers to. In these scenes, pay attention to how neither parents moves only one step with or in the direction of the boy which I found truly sad. The big tree between them also shows how there is probably absolutely no more talking going on between these two. The new man in the woman's life may be one possible explanation. But it is not important to find out about the details. I must say it took a little while till I began appreciating this movie. The loud music early on isn't helping for me personally and the animation style is also one that you need to get used to. But the melancholy eventually takes over and draws you in. The best example is how the boy has no mouth, so you never see him smile, even in these more fun moments like when he jokes around with his mother while they are painting a room. And even there the fun needs to start with the boy, not the parents really. There is a whole lot more I could write about this film. I think I would be fine with this one winning the Oscar as honestly I'd be fine with almost anything except Bao, but my favorite is still the one about the girl going to the moon. Now that one is even more unlikely than this one here. But "Weekends" is probably my second pick. So good luck to Jimenez that he can pull off the upset. His work here is certainly a definite contender for deepest and most meaningful (animated) short film from 2017. And all that in only 15 minutes. Go see it, but don't take your very young kids with you. This is a prime example of animation for grown-up, not just because one actually genuinely creepy dream sequence that I did not see coming this way.
0 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Genius, oscar nomination well deserved
theprivatejetset8 July 2019
Warning: Spoilers
This was an unpretentious, beautifully constructed short film with so much descriptive visual language that any spoken word would have been overkill.

I was transported to a time and place and feeling that was both breathtaking and heartbreaking.

Investors, influencers, invisible hands, whomever's reading this, please give this person more money to make art, it'll make the world a better place.

Spoiler: I cried like a toddler with a severely skinned knee at the end.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Very well observed, constructed, and animated
bob the moo9 March 2019
I have watched quite a few animations recently where they have been technically very good, but have offered me very little in the way of feelings. Weekends managed to be a fantastic break from that, as it has so much heart and realism to it that it is as far from experimental as you can get. However it is still very creative, and technically the animation is great. The film sees a young boy going between parents due to their divorce, and follows the state of turmoil and confusion he finds himself. I read it is a very personal film for the writer/director, and I can believe it because it is incredibly well observed in the detail of the situation.

Without any dialogue, it tells us a lot about the parents, about the conditions and feelings in both homes, and informs how the boy is stuck with it. The choice of music, the man-cave aspect of the father's new home, the walk of the pickup/dropoff all contain detail which add to the viewing experience and make for a better film. The dream sequences and the structure of the film convey the sense of being in the moment with the boy very well, so even if it is not something you have experienced, it is still very clear and easy to follow.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed