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A Prairie Home Companion
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Directed by Robert Altman.
Acclaimed filmmaker Robert Altman (Short Cuts, Nashville) brings National Public Radio stalwart Garrison Keillor's long-running radio program to vivid life on the big screen in a intricately woven backstage fable centering on the final performance of a fictionalized version of his variety show. As if the result of some strange mass-media fluke, the popular radio program A Prairie Home Companion somehow managed to survive the television age to entertain its audience every Saturday night from the stage of the historic Fitzgerald Theater in St. Paul, MN. Week after week, hangdog host Garrison Keillor serves as unflappable emcee to an amiable hodgepodge of radio-friendly acts that include the likes of popular country duo Yolanda and Rhonda Johnson (Meryl Streep and Lily Tomlin) and singing cowboys the Old Trailhands (Woody Harrelson and John C. Reilly). This is one show where the under-the-line antics are nearly as entertaining as the program itself, though, and in between the efforts of down-on-his-luck private dick and backstage doorkeeper Guy Noir (Kevin Kline) to discover the true identity of a mysterious blonde (Virginia Madsen) and aspiring teen singer Lola (Lindsay Lohan) to find her true voice before a live audience, there's still plenty of fun and mystery to be had at the old Fitzgerald before the final curtain falls on A Prairie Home Companion. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
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CinemaRianCinemaRian A Prairie Home Companion (2006, ...
by CinemaRian in CinemaRian Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"I was positive I was going to hate A Prairie Home Companion, because I was positive that Robert Altman, a director I have always found annoying, was going to ruin the greatness of the radio program. I was wrong. This is the best film I have seen so far this year and is Altman's best- yes better than Nashville and McCabe and Mrs. Miller. For those who are tragically unfamiliar with the source material, A Prairie Home Companion is an NPR radio variety show hosted and written by Garrison Keillor, who I believe is the greatest American humorist since Mark Twain. The show alternates between bluegrass music, phony commercials, a few comedy skits and always a weekly monologue from Keillor, "News from Lake Wobegon" where he describes the recent events in his fictitious hometown in Minnesota. The show is very funny, but also very beautiful- Lake Wobegon may very well be the most beautiful place on Earth. When I heard a film was going to be made from the show, I questioned how it was possibl ... " [More]
MovieBabeMovieBabe A Prairie Home Companion - The ...
by MovieBabe in MovieBabe Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"By Tricia Olszewski A Prairie Home Companion was created for—and by—the kind of people who still appreciate the olde-fashioned longing in lyrics such as “Come and sit by my side if you love me/Do not hasten to bid me adieu.” That couplet, from trad-folk number “Red River Valley,” closes the film, a reflection on nostalgia and the end of things beloved written by Garrison Keillor and directed by Robert Altman. From the former, you’d expect as much. From the latter, you have to wonder: Is this a part of the American experience he really needs to be bothering with? Based on Keillor’s identically titled and, at 31 years, still-running NPR program, the loose narrative involves the final episode of a modern-day radio variety show, touching on soured love affairs and unspooling a significant subplot about death. It’s impossible not to consider that this may be the 81-year-old Altman’s swan song, as well—Paul Thomas Anders ... " [More]
JennJenn I love the radio show Praire Ho ...
by Jenn in Jenn Blog
lost interest.
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"I did not however enjoy the movie. Robert Altman captured my sentiments exactly when in the commentary near the end of the film, he starts to yawn incessantly because he's bored. He actually questions and hopes that audiences watching the film don't get bored as well. He knows it's bad. He's done some really amazing films. Surely he knew when to stop the movie or how to make it better but was bound and gagged during filming and editing. I love Garrison's antics, stories, and quirky songs. I love all of it, but he was missing too much in the film. Perhaps Keven Kline starring as Guy Noir was chosen to be the predominant actor (and narrator) because they thought he'd be funny in a quirky almost handsome sort of way. Perhaps Garrison didn't want the 'lead' or wasn't comfortable with the acting bit having been on radio his whole (most?) career. Unfortunately Kevin isn't all that funny - though I adored him in a Fish Called Wanda, ... " [More]
gotheregothere Prairie Home Companion
by gothere in You should go there
liked it.
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"I thought this was a good film, what one comes to expect from recent Altman films. It's an audio-visual collage and a study on character and acting that captures random and poignant moments on film, seemingly only loosely based on a script. I like Garrison Keillor, and if you do, you'll probably like the film. You have to hand it to a guy for writing a screenplay about his own show's demise. I enjoy his introspective observations and meanderings on American culture in his real radio program, much more than his way-down-yonder-in-the-yankety -yank music selection, which can seem forced. I do enjoy Keillor's bold throwback orientation on music, that it's to be performed and enjoyed, not just downloaded and worshiped. He sings from the heart, but he's no singer. The film focuses on both observational character sketches and music from the heart, like the real Prairie Home Companion. And like the actual show, the film has spiritual overtones, but so overtly Christian that it might turn ... " [More]
MullyMully A Prairie Home Companion
by Mully in Mully Blog
liked it.
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"The News From the Fitzgerald Theater 7/10 I have only recently discovered Garrison Keillor’s Lake Wobegon series and have quickly fallen in love with the man’s incredible storytelling talent. Before that I only knew Garrison Keillor from that scene in The Simpsons where the family is watching him on TV until Homer finally gets up, hits the television and shouts out “Stupid TV ! Be more funny !” In his Lake Wobegon stories Keillor had a large cast of petty but lovable characters and he talked about the joyous, the sad and the non-events in their lives, which of course makes this material a perfect match for director Robert Altman. Even in the saddest Wobegon stories Keillor always knew how to get a smile from the audience and that’s also how this film felt. The events that occur are basically sad ones : the radio show Keillor (playing himself) and his musical posse have been doing for thirty years is into its final broadcast and one of the performers actually dies during the show. T ... " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
This big-screen adaptation of Garrison Keillor's long-running radio show A Prairie Home Companion, directed by an octogenarian Robert Altman, offers a beautiful synthesis of two unique artistic visions. Both an ode to old-time radio while a sly parody of it, Keillor's program has always attempted to achieve nostalgia through humor, music, and song. His pining for a lost time carries over to the fictional version of the show presented in the film, but Altman, just a few years removed from a heart transplant, obviously has mortality on his mind. He infuses this material with a sense of foreboding that dovetails nicely with Keillor's nostalgia to create a somber, downright sad film that still manages to produce smiles and laughs thanks to the actors and the performance material. Lily Tomlin and Meryl Streep play a sister singing act, and their conversations in the film offer a clear example of everything that Altman does well with actors. To each other, and to Streep's daughter (a very game Lindsay Lohan), they spend much of the film telling long, rambling stories to each other about the history of their family during which they step on each others lines, digress to seemingly random topics, and offer unexpected but truthful emotional expressions of love and grief. Altman gives them plenty of room in the frame, so much so that after a while the audience may feel like they are eavesdropping on the conversations rather than watching written material being performed. Woody Harrelson and John C. Reilly perform a hilarious song about telling dirty jokes, and the scenes of Streep and Tomlin singing together on-stage are as subtly and fully engaging as their dialogue scenes. Although A Prairie Home Companion will probably never be considered among Altman's classic works, it does offer the opportunity to witness a great artist never questioning the purpose of creating art and entertainment even as death feels closer than ever before. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide
 



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