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Junebug
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Directed by Phil Morrison.
Phil Morrison, who collaborated with screenwriter Angus MacLachlan for his acclaimed 1990 short, Tater Tomater, joins forces with MacLachlan again for his feature-film debut, Junebug. Junebug takes place in rural North Carolina. Madeleine (Embeth Davidtz), a sophisticated Chicagoan who owns a gallery devoted to "outsider art," goes south in an effort to woo an eccentric painter (Frank Hoyt Taylor) to her gallery. She brings along her husband, George (Alessandro Nivola), a native of the area, and the couple stays with his family. Peg (Celia Weston), George's mother, gives Madeleine a rather chilly greeting, and seems to think she's a poor match for her eldest son, while his father, Eugene (Scott Wilson), is a bit more welcoming, in his quiet way. George's younger brother, Johnny (Ben McKenzie), is still living at home with his very pregnant wife, Ashley (Amy Adams), and seems to feel nothing but resentment for George. For her part, Ashley is a gregarious young woman, and she's immediately smitten with her "new sister." Junebug was selected by the Museum of Modern Art and the Film Society of Lincoln Center for inclusion in the 2005 edition of New Directors/New Films. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide
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CinemaRianCinemaRian Junebug (2005, USA, Phil Morris ...
by CinemaRian in CinemaRian Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"If there is one contemporary movement that I simply do not get, it is the Clever Comedy. It was started by a director that almost everyone likes but me, Wes Anderson, is continued through movies like Junebug. A lot of critics loved the film said that this was one the best of 2005. I hated it. We'll have more on the Clever Comedy later, but to get through the plot (blessedly faster than the movie does) Junebug involves Madeline (Embeth Davidtz) a British art dealer traveling with her husband George (Alessendro Nivola) to his hometown in North Carolina. His family is a collection of colorful characters including George's sister, Ashley (Amy Adams) who is pregnant and immedatley is facinated by someone so upperclass and cultured. There are a lot of sublots. They help to make the movie too long, but it would have been too long at ten minuets. This unoriginal material is presented in an Anderson-esq style, with simplistically etched "comic" characters and a lot of musical interludes ... " [More]
BigJeffLebowskiBigJeffLebowski "It's funnier in the original P ...
by BigJeffLebowski in BigJeffLebowski Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"For better or for worse, Charlie Wilson's War plays pretty much exactly like one would expect a film written by Aaron Sorkin and directed by Mike Nichols would. It's talky, snarky, ever so slightly rigid, but far too much fun to let those qualities be to its detriment.As Charlie Wilson, a boozing, womanizing Texas congressman, Tom Hanks brings his trademark charm to the proceedings, but thankfully leaves most of his sentimentality at home. After visiting Afghanistan as a favor to political lobbyist and sometime paramour Joanne Herring (Julia Roberts), Wilson teams with Gust Avrakotos (Philip Seymour Hoffman, in top form) a CIA agent ecstatic to finally drum up some support for the Afghani cause.Sorkin is very much at home writing about what goes on backstage in American politics (and the film does tend to drown its audience in facts, figures, and jargon that it is presumptuous to assume we all understand with equal aplomb), but it is what Nichols and his cast bring to the ... " [More]
SpoutBlogSpoutBlog BlogNosh 11/20/07
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
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"Mick LaSalle asked us last week what movie we would like to be inside (instead of Beowulf, which we can sort of feel like we’re in). Personally, I think being inside The Wizard of Oz would be awful. I might even prefer The Wiz, and I’d hate to be in The Wiz. I’d even prefer to hang out with Fred Savage in The Wizard, and I don’t play video games. My answers: anything Capra (well, almost anything — no Why We Fight docs); anything Marx Brothers; anything Muppets; anything Miyazaki; Amelie; Close Encounters of the Third Kind; The Goonies (why not?); and What Dreams May Come (the movie was bad; the setting was beautiful). In honor of me writing more about Enchanted than Karina ever would dream of, I present Rob’s review from his I don’t like Renee Zellweger blog, to show I’m not the only blogger addressing such mainstream fare. Like me, Rob found the movie to be “uninspired,” though he was apparently “disappointed” (I had a low expectation to begin with) and even notes that Amy Adams m ... " [More]
leexineleexine Blah
by leexine in leexine Blog
is neutral about it.
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"Junebug produces mixed feelings. The acting was pretty fantastic, even the kid from the OC (Benjamin McKenzie) was great, and all the characters were convincing - except George who is kind of in the background for most of the movie. A lot of the movie is predictable, and it is somewhat slow. My interest was never really lost, but by the end of it, only a feeling of 'blah' remained. The enviornment was set up quite nicely with long cuts of every empty room in the quiet house, but if it wasn't for chipper Ashley it would have been too drab. I would not watch this movie again, but props to the acting and the quiet Dad who you might fall in love with (the bird at the end is a cute touch). " [More]
MovieBabeMovieBabe Junebug
by MovieBabe in MovieBabe Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"By Tricia Olszewski The symbolism isn’t subtle in Junebug, Phil Morrison’s full-length directorial debut about the culture shock that can ensue when folks on opposite sides of the Mason-Dixon Line meet. Written by first-time feature scripter Angus MacLachlan, Junebug tells the story of Madeleine (Embeth Davidtz), a worldly Chicago gallery owner who (metaphor alert!) specializes in outsider art, and, on a trip to North Carolina to solicit a local artist, visits her new in-laws with her husband of six months, George (Laurel Canyon’s Alessandro Nivola). George hasn’t seen his family in years and has pretty much abandoned his small-town roots. And though the warm, affectionate, but very urbane Madeleine is thrilled to meet her new kin—abrasive matriarch Peg (Celia Weston), quiet dad Eugene (Scott Wilson), angry kid brother Johnny (The O.C.’s Benjamin McKenzie), and Johnny’s young, pregnant wife, Ashley (Amy Adams)—her sophistication and ... " [More]
azgukiazguki WHAT A PLEASANT SURPRISE
by azguki in azguki Blog
liked it.
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"This film was just released in Korea last week. What a pleasant surprise this movie was. I found it to be an absolutely refreshing piece of work. The characters are so well drawn (not to mention thrown right out of the screen and into your lap). Warm, funny, touching, bothersome........how on earth did one filmmaker put all of that into a single work. And that kid from the OC is actually a fun actor to watch. I have never seen the show, but I imagine that they do not use him to his potential. High quality entertainment here. This reaches beyond what all those other art-house/indie movies try to do, but never quite touch. " [More]
JimBellJimBell June Bug
by JimBell in JimBell Blog
liked it.
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"Junebug (2005) is a slice-of-life movie; any attempts to pin some big theme on it are off-base. The plot is simple: A successful guy, George (the sexy Allessandro Nivola) and his gallery-owner wife, Madeleine (the svelte Embeth Davidtz) travel from Chicago to the hills of North Carolina to check out a folk artist and to meet George’s family. While George’s little brother’s wife goes into labour, Madeleine makes a last ditch effort to get the crazy folk artist to sign with her gallery. Then George and Madeleine drive back to Chicago. The end. But in between, this low-budget movie makes us believe in and feel with the family. One of the best scenes is when George—much to his new wife’s surprise—is asked to sing a hymn at the Sunday service. It is so heart-felt, the three-part harmony so fine, and the melody so affecting that anyone following the movie will be pulled into the moment, just as Madeleine wonders, with admiration and alarm, whom she ha ... " [More]
PammyKPammyK Watch and not knit
by PammyK in knitting flicks
is neutral about it.
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"This film is on the "Watch and knit" list, but I'm not sure I would knit while watching it. I feel like there were too many abrupt scene changes and minor facial expressions that would be missed. There very well could/should have been knittng in the film...Ashley did get some knitted baby booties at her shower that were probably not store bought, but it was not clear. " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
Phil Morrison's Junebug has many of the elements expected from American independent films. It is character driven, offers a geographically specific location that is rarely seen in American films, and features lead characters who change in small and possibly, depending on one's appreciation of the film, profound ways. The strengths of the film are in the women. Embeth Davidtz plays Madeline, the sophisticated art dealer visiting the rural backwater that is home to her husband's family. She manages to make a character that should be unsympathetic very empathetic mostly because she does nothing consciously to offend her hosts' sensibilities. Hers is a finely modulated performance. Amy Adams, as the talkative sister-in-law who desires to gain some of Madeline's worldliness, serves up a great performance. The character lacks the prejudice seen in the other characters. Her performance is as open as her character, full of wide-eyed wonder and -- when the time comes -- deeply felt sadness. She portrays all of these emotions without ever sounding a false or actorly note. Where Morrison's film fails is in not clearly defining the role of Madeline's husband, George. He seems disinterested and disassociated from everyone and everything except for the few moments when he is deeply engaged in a particular activity or person. Those changes in attitude seem so arbitrary that one is left with the suspicion that the character's ambivalence stems more from the filmmaker's inability to figure him out than from the character himself. While this problem disrupts the overall effect of the film, Adams and Davidtz make Junebug a worthy experience for anyone who appreciates fine acting. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide
 



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