Skip to main content
Filmarian
All films
Poster for American Farm
2005 · FILM

American Farm

Released: February 19, 2005Runtime:

Documentary

Director James Spione's passionate portrait of his extended family is an intimate revelation of the inner workings of the American family farm. Unlike previous documentaries on the subject, Spione examines the impending demise of the farm where his Mom grew up as the result not of economic trends or political pressures, but rather, the increasingly strained intergenerational dynamics between family members. With extraordinary plain-spoken candor, the Ames family reveals how callous parenting and diverging religious views may have led an entire generation to turn away from the family tradition. On the other hand, the film makes abundantly clear that the work itself is still a back-breaking grind, a difficult path for even the hardiest farmer's son to follow, even in the era of air-conditioned tractor cabs. A powerful evocation of a vanishing way of life, and a moving tribute to the rare character it takes to persevere on a small American farm.

Rating
Sign in to rate

Credits

Related titles

No curated related titles yet. Use the edit affordance to add "More from this director", "Same franchise", or "Adaptation source material" entries — every change goes through the wiki review queue.

Technical specs

No technical specs (aspect ratio, sound mix, cameras…) documented yet. Know it? Add it →

Awards

No awards or nominations listed yet. Know it? Add it →

Connections

No connections (sequels, references, remakes…) mapped yet. Know it? Add it →

Soundtrack

No soundtrack documented yet. Know it? Add it →

Filming locations

No filming locations documented yet. Know it? Add it →

Your take
Seen it? Let the room know.
Progress
h:mm or minutes
0% watchedAdd a timestamp or use Adjust manually

Sign in to track, collect & rate — keep your watchlist, collection, and lists across the network.

Community tags

Be the first to tag this page. A tag becomes publicly visible once it reaches the community vote threshold.