Skip to main content
film review

“We’re not trash. We’re good people,” says Andrew, one of the three adolescent boys portrayed in documentary film Rich Hill.

"We're not trash. We're good people," says Andrew, one of the three adolescent boys portrayed in this achingly empathetic film about left-behind America, set in the small and ironically named town of Rich Hill, Mo.

Fifteen-year-old Harley, whose mom is in jail for attempted murder, struggles in school and, despite his good humour and charm, suffers from a traumatic sexual assault. Thirteen-year-old Appachey, a skateboarder fan with a high-flying artistic imagination, has a violent temper that could portend a future in long-term incarceration. The most hopeful case is the sweet-tempered Andrew, who gently excuses his father, a part-time Hank Williams impersonator, for his chronic disinclination to hold a full-time job.

The confluence of poverty, dysfunctional parenting and poor educational prospects makes the oft-idealized small-town life look like an incubator for failure, no matter how high and spectacular the Fourth of July fireworks fly.

Follow related authors and topics

Authors and topics you follow will be added to your personal news feed in Following.

Interact with The Globe