The Nail: The Story of Joey Nardone 2009 | Boys in movies [BiM]

The Nail: The Story of Joey Nardone 2009 | Boys in movies [BiM]
The Nail: The Story of Joey Nardone 2009

The Nail: The Story of Joey Nardone (2009)

The Nail: The Story of Joey Nardone 2009
– 1h 30min | Drama | 3 August 2009 (USA)

Storyline:

Tony Luke, Jr. stars as Joey Nardone, an out-of-shape boxer, who after 8 years in prison for an unfortunate accident leaves prison and gets a shot at redemption by fighting for one young boy’s future – 14 year old Jesus. Joey and Jesus begin a relationship that gives them both a new and inspired life with a purpose: to only “fight for the right.”

Motion Picture Rating (MPAA)
Rated R for language, violence including some domestic abuse, and brief sexuality.

User review:

No Spoilers ahead…. Was on hand to see and enjoy “The Nail:The Story of Joey Nardone” in Philly today and without giving anything away, it hits all the marks as a powerful little character study. Philly’s son Tony Luke Jr. has acted in some movies but now he takes lead in a moving tale of a down and out ex-con trying to live his life with dignity and regret. A former Golden Gloves champ who did his eight years of hard time, Joey moves into the old neighborhood (changed into a horrible ghetto) and wants to return the old gym and help out his best friend Pete (Leo Rossi doing a fine turn as the world weary corner man). His next door neighbor is a monster lowbrow who beats his wife and teen son, Jesus. Joey saves Jesus from a scuffle with a nasty trio of local bullies, and they soon make a friendship. Joey finds a reason to grow as a person through teaching his young ward self defense.

“The Nail” is not a boxing movie, but “the sweet science” is a lesson in real life, and Joey is the teacher. He still has a lot to learn, and the audience goes along with the story as if they are hanging on the corner in South Philly, watching the world go by. This movie is as hard edged as any great classic from the 70’s like “Mean Streets”, no punches pulled. I have to say, the punch of this movie is crossing a sentimental street parable with brutal reality.

Director James Quattrochi from the Bronx brings his street sense to Philadelphia. With a low budget, and a passion for the tone of good film makers like John G. Avidson and Martin Ritt, he makes this an engrossing film on all levels. Producers Luke and Rossi are pouring it all out with casting locals and newcomer Paul Orrantia (a real talent)as Jesus. Tony Danza and Ray ‘Boom Boom” Mancini in support to give the movie spice and ring credit. William Forsythe as a good hearted goombah is welcome anywhere he goes. The star of the movie is Tony Luke and he is as real as a cheese steak and cheeze-whiz. It’s as much fun as watching Howard Stern play himself in “Private Parts”.

Director: James Quattrochi
Writers: Tony Luke Jr. (story), Jason Noto
Stars: William Forsythe, Tony Danza, Leo Rossi
Country: USA
Language: English
Release Date: 3 August 2009 (USA)
Also Known As: The Nail
Filming Locations: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1225698/

The Nail: The Story of Joey Nardone 2009 The Nail: The Story of Joey Nardone 2009

The Nail: The Story of Joey Nardone 2009 The Nail: The Story of Joey Nardone 2009

The Nail: The Story of Joey Nardone 2009 The Nail: The Story of Joey Nardone 2009

The Nail: The Story of Joey Nardone 2009 The Nail: The Story of Joey Nardone 2009

The Nail: The Story of Joey Nardone 2009 The Nail: The Story of Joey Nardone 2009

The Nail: The Story of Joey Nardone 2009 The Nail: The Story of Joey Nardone 2009

The Nail: The Story of Joey Nardone 2009

Format : Matroska
Format version : Version 4
File size : 1.55 GiB
Duration : 1 h 29 min
Overall bit rate : 2 471 kb/s

Download from Nitroflare

Bookmark the permalink.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


  • Subscribe to website via Email

    Enter your email address to subscribe to this website and receive notifications of new posts by email.

    Join 31 other subscribers