The sporadic outbursts of anger and grief make her feel genuine. It’s written on her frightened eyes and forlorn face. Carpenter’s eyes tell the story she can’t tell strangers. Her performance is similarly understated but eye-catching. The former Disney Channel star embraces the unkempt look of living on the road, without any glamor or heavy makeup and her hair so disheveled, it looks like she lost her brush weeks ago. Sometimes, it even lands her in trouble.īringing Nola to life would have been impossible were it not for Carpenter’s deeply felt performance. The character is so well-drawn out, her survival tactics thought out, that even though she still acts like a shy teenager at times, her fierce independence is never far from the surface. For them, living off-the-grid means no family or support system in place to step in when tragedy strikes, so Nola is left to fend for herself not just physically and financially but emotionally as well. She shows us what Nola’s lost when her dad dies, and we get a glimpse of their counterculture worldview, helping us understand why she wants to keep his memory alive by staying on the road. Simon-Kennedy, who wrote and directed “The Short History of the Long Road,” sets up Nola to win the audience’s sympathy. Nola will have to make sense of the loss on her own and figure how she, still only a minor, will survive on her dad’s life lessons. When Clint suddenly dies, the movie leaves behind the cute father-daughter story and shifts gears towards a painful coming-of-age tale. Clint wants his daughter to learn how to live an independent life with nothing to tie her down or hold her back, but it’s a lonely life with its own set of problems. Teenaged Nola and her dad Clint ( Steven Ogg) share a rambling existence roaming the American Southwest in an old van, helping themselves to the occasional dip in a pool that isn’t theirs, singing along to early '60s pop songs and working odd repair gigs to make ends meet. There are gentle surprises in the trip’s unexpected turns and setbacks, and thankfully, Simon-Kennedy knows where she’s going. What you think will happen to its lead character Nola ( Sabrina Carpenter), doesn’t. Ani Simon-Kennedy’s bittersweet road trip drama “The Short History of the Long Road” is a journey without a destination.
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