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Cold Mountain

 
Movies:

Cold Mountain

  • Director: Anthony Minghella
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Romance
  • Movie Type: War Drama, Anti-War Film
  • Themes: Women During Wartime, Star-Crossed Lovers, Brief Encounters
  • Main Cast: Jude Law, Nicole Kidman, Renée Zellweger, Eileen Atkins, Brendan Gleeson, Philip Seymour Hoffman
  • Release Year: 2003
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 155 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

Based on the novel by Charles Frazier, Anthony Minghella's star-studded Cold Mountain is a sweeping tale set in the final days of the American Civil War. Jude Law stars as Inman, a young soldier who, despite an injury, is struggling to make his way home to Cold Mountain, NC, where his beloved Ada (Nicole Kidman) awaits. In Inman's absence, Ada befriends Ruby (Renée Zellweger), who helps her keep up her late father's farm. Meanwhile, in his travels, Inman encounters a menagerie of interesting folks. Also starring Natalie Portman, Giovanni Ribisi, Donald Sutherland, and Philip Seymore Hoffman, Cold Mountain features original music by Jack White of the White Stripes. ~ Matthew Tobey, All Movie Guide

Review

Anthony Minghella's Cold Mountain is at once a beautifully shot, contemplative film about the Civil War South, and a messy, uneven narrative that fails to fully engage the viewer. Chief among the film's problems is its unbalanced mix of romance, war drama, road movie, and ensemble film elements. Considering the fact that this film is, at its heart, a romance, it is unfortunate that the leads lack chemistry. Although part of this may be due to the fact that both actors are playing very internalized characters -- Kidman a shy and unsure belle, and Law a thoughtful, yet introverted, man of few words -- they just do not stir up the requisite amount of passion when onscreen together for their love story to be compelling. There is also little foundation for their relationship in the story line since they barely interact with each other before their separation. Attempts to convey Ada's (Kidman) inner thoughts through voice-over readings of her love letters fall into melodrama, and Inman's (Law) repeated gazing at Ada's daguerreotype falls short of conveying more than escapist sentiments amidst his harsh surroundings. In fact, his decision to desert the Confederate Army seems to be grounded more in his own desire to get away from the bloodshed and death than in acquiescence to her call for his return.

Thankfully, there is much more to both of their stories than their supposed love for each other. Though Ada and Inman maintain rather aloof personalities, even in their separate stories, they still have a multitude of other characters with which to interact. The film is bursting at the seams with colorful "country folk," disturbing opportunists, and sad souls -- many populated by recognizable character actors and minor stars. From the sinful Southern preacher played by the always-intriguing Philip Seymour Hoffman to the desperate, widowed young mother portrayed with ferocity by Natalie Portman, these characters are the lifeblood of the film. The larger supporting roles are taken by those in Ada's life, including a devastating turn by Kathy Baker as her neighbor and a moving turn by Donald Sutherland as Ada's wise father. Renée Zellweger's feisty performance as a down-home girl who helps Ada run her farm, becoming her closest friend in the process, may be considered by some as hamming it up or chewing the scenery; however, her character injects life into the film where it would otherwise have fallen horribly flat. The problem with all of these many performances is that they upstage the two leads. In this barrage of characters, even many cameo performers come across as full-blooded, three-dimensional personalities, while Ada and Inman seem more like blank slates.

Helping out the film immensely is its wonderful musical score by Gabriel Yared and its many traditional country and folk tunes. The work of Alison Krauss, Jack White, and many other artists really brings the film to life, giving the Southern characters and environment a sense of authenticity throughout. Yared's score imbues the romance with a subtle, understated warmth that it could not have accomplished on its own and works beautifully with the sweeping, gorgeous cinematography. One should be warned that the film is very gruesome and brutal in parts, truly depicting the savagery of war and the anarchy that overran the South as the Civil War was being lost. This brutality, characterized at first on the actual battlefield, but also in many of the characters' heartless actions, threatens to overwhelm the love story and any hope the film seeks to offer. The movie seems to want its romance to be the unifying element, but the love story ends up feeling more like an ineffectual backdrop most of the time, not strong enough to balance out the disheartening elements of the film. Cold Mountain is really a beautifully crafted movie; it's just a shame that many of its disparate elements could not come together to create a cohesive cinematic experience. ~ Dana Rowader, All Movie Guide

Cast

Natalie Portman - Sara; Giovanni Ribisi - Junior; Donald Sutherland - Monroe; Ray Winstone - Teague; Kathy Baker - Sally Swanger; James Gammon - Esco Swanger; Charlie Hunnam - Bosie; Jack White - Georgia; Ethan Suplee; Jena Malone; Melora Walters - Lila; Lucas Black - Oakley; Taryn Manning - Shyla; Tom Aldredge - Blind Man; James Rebhorn - Doctor; Mark Jeffrey Miller - Sheffield; Robin Mullins - Mrs. Castlereagh; Emily Deschanel; Jay Tavare - Swimmer; Jen Apgar - Dolly

Credit

Maria Teresa Barbasso - Art Director, Pier Luigi Basile - Art Director, Cristian Niculescu - Art Director, Luca Tranchino - Art Director, Robert Guerra - Supervising Art Director, Steven E. Andrews - Associate Producer, Tim Bricknell - Associate Producer, David Rubin - Casting, Ronna Kress - Casting, Ann Roth - Costume Designer, Carlo Poggioli - Costume Designer, Steven E. Andrews - First Assistant Director, Anthony Minghella - Director, Derin A. Seale - Second Unit Director, Walter Murch - Editor, Iain Smith - Executive Producer, Bob Weinstein - Executive Producer, Harvey Weinstein - Executive Producer, Bob Osher - Executive Producer, Paul Engelen - Hair Styles, Ivana Primorac - Hair Styles, Gabriel Yared - Composer (Music Score), T-Bone Burnett - Musical Direction/Supervision, Elvis Costello - Songwriter, Sting - Songwriter, Jack White - Songwriter, Paul Engelen - Makeup, Ivana Primorac - Makeup, Dante Ferretti - Production Designer, John Seale - Cinematographer, William Horberg - Producer, Sydney Pollack - Producer, Ron Yerxa - Producer, Albert Berger - Producer, Ivan Sharrock - Sound/Sound Designer, Anthony Minghella - Screenwriter, Tim Wooster - Second Unit Director Of Photography, Walter Murch - Re-Recording Mixer, Mike Prestwood Smith - Re-Recording Mixer, Matthew Gough - Re-Recording Mixer, Eddy Joseph - Supervising Sound Editor, Double Negative Ltd. - Visual Effects, Francesca Lo Schiavo - Set Decorator, Charles Frazier - Book Author, Gary Pilkinton - Special Effects Technician

Similar Movies

Gone With the Wind; North and South; Glory; Ride With the Devil; A Very Long Engagement; Captain Corelli's Mandolin; Ballad of a Soldier; True Women; Love in the Time of Cholera
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Wikipedia: Cold Mountain (film)
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Cold Mountain

film poster
Directed by Anthony Minghella
Produced by Albert Berger
William Horberg
Sydney Pollack
Ron Yerxa
Written by Charles Frazier (book)
Anthony Minghella
Starring Jude Law
Nicole Kidman
Renée Zellweger
Eileen Atkins
Kathy Baker
Brendan Gleeson
Philip Seymour Hoffman
Charlie Hunnam
Natalie Portman
Giovanni Ribisi
Donald Sutherland
James Gammon
Jack White
Ethan Suplee
Music by Gabriel Yared
Cinematography John Seale
Editing by Walter Murch
Distributed by Miramax Films
Release date(s) December 25, 2003
Running time 154 min.
Country  United States
Language English
Budget $83,000,000
Gross revenue $173,013,509

Cold Mountain is a 2003 film written and directed by Anthony Minghella. The film is based on the novel by Charles Frazier.

Contents

Plot

At the film's inception Jude Law plays a young man named W. P. Inman at a provincial North Carolina town. He meets Ada (Kidman) and is at the fledgling stages of a relationship with her when he marches off to war as a Confederate soldier.

The film opens early in the morning of July 30th, 1864. Confederate troops are entrenched outside Petersburg during it's siege. The teenaged Oakley (Lucas Black) is handing out clothes from a wheelbarrow while Inman reads letters from Ada. The soldiers are tired and bored. Most are seasoned veterans who haven been fighting for over three years. But meanwhile Union engineers are filling a mine under the Confederate trenches with gunpowder barrels while above, hundreds Union troops are waiting to attack. Suddenly back at the Confederate siege works, a rabbit hops into the trench. Just as one of the men is about to capture it the ground rises from under him and there is a huge explosion. The Union lit the barrels and most of the trench exploded. As Inman and Oakley get up dazed from the blast they see Union troops charging at them. As the Union charge they run right into the crater where the trench used to be and are trapped in a kill zone. The Confederates fire down at them but the fighting becomes hand to hand and Oakley is pulled down in by a Union soldier and Inman goes after him. Before Inman can reach him Oakley is bayoneted but survives. Inman shoots the Union soldier with a LeMat revolver he finds and pulls Oakley out of the chaos. The battle ends with a huge Union defeat. As the Confederates are cleaning up after the battle, Inman comforts Oakley as he is pulled to the hospital on a cart. Later that day Oakley dies in the hospital with Inman and Stobrod Thewes (Brendan Gleeson) beside him.

The next night, Inman and his platoon are sent out to kill surviving Union troops trapped behind the lines. During the raid other Union troops open fire killing several Confederates and wounding Inman. While lying in the hospital he has letters read to him from Ada. Inman then decides to desert and go home to Cold Mountain.

On his journey he meets the corrupt preacher Reverend Veasey (Hoffman) who is trying to kill his pregnant lover. After Inman dissuades him, he joins Inman on his journey. They help a young man named Junior (Ribisi) butcher his cow and join him and his family for the feast. However, Junior reports them to the Confederate Home Guard and both Inman and Veasey are taken prisoner.

While the home guard officers attempt to hide from a group of Union soldiers, Inman is able to escape with a wound. An old and wizened woman cares for him and feeds him. He then meets a young widow named Sara (Portman) who is raising her infant child alone.

After staying a night with her, three Union soldiers arrive demanding food. Sara rushes Inman away to avoid his being killed, but he hides only a few feet away from the house. Two of the soldiers harass Sara and leave her baby in the cold, though one (Cillian Murphy) attempts to keep the baby warm. The lead soldier attempts to rape Sara but is killed along with the other soldier by Inman. The kindhearted soldier is shot by Sara.

Parallel with Inman's adventures, the film follws Ada's wartime experiences. Ada is a city woman who only recently moved to the rural farm named Black Cove. She met Inman on her first day at Cold Mountain, and had a brief romance with him the night before he left for the army. Shortly after Inman leaves, her minister father dies, leaving her alone on the farm and with little prospect for help, as the young, able-bodied men are off at war.

She is completely inept at working the farm, having been raised to become a southern lady and is struggling to survive at the farm. She manages to survive thanks to the kindness of her neighbors, one of whom eventually sends Ruby Thewes (Zellweger) to her.

Ruby is a young woman who has lived a hard-scrabble life and is very adept at the tasks needed to run the farm. Ruby lives at the farm with Ada and together, they take the farm from a state of disaster to working order. During this time, Ada writes constant letters to Inman in hopes of meeting him again and renewing their romance.

The two women form a close friendship and become each other's confidantes. They also are friends with the Swangers, who live down the road from Black Cove. It is at the Swangers' well that Ada "sees" a vision of Inman coming back to her in the snow along with a flock of crows.

During the war, Ada and Ruby, and other members of their community, have several tense encounters with men who are members of the Home Guard. This branch of the Home Guard is led by Teague, whose grandfather once owned much of Cold Mountain. He and his deputies hunt deserters partially with the goal of Teague seizing their land. Teague also lusts after Ada.

Although the purpose of the Home Guard was to protect the south and its citizen population from the North, they have become violent vigilantes who hunt and often kill deserters from the Confederate Army and terrorize citizens they believe are housing or helping the deserters. Ruby's estranged father Stobrod (Brendan Gleeson), also a Confederate deserter and a violin player, arrives and reconciles with her. He convinces her to make a coat for his intellectually devoid banjo player Pangle. Ruby also finds herself drawn to mandolin player Georgia (Jack White).

While camping, Stobrod, Pangle and Georgia are cornered by the Home Guardsmen led by Teague. Pangle unintentionally reveals the band as the deserters Teague is seeking. Georgia is hidden a few feet away, and witnesses the shooting of Pangle and Stobrod. He informs Ruby and Ada, who rush to the campsite to find Pangle dead and Stobrod injured. They decide to stay at some cabins in the woods to avoid Teague and his men.

It is at this moment that the two story lines reconverge: Inman finally reaches Cold Mountain, and is almost killed by Ada before she recognizes him. They later consummate their love and spend the night together.

The Home Guardsmen, however, soon find the couple in the mountain and determine to kill Inman, as they know he's a deserter. While fighting off the hunters, Inman is shot by the young and violent Bosie, but manages to kill him as well. Ada goes to him, and finds him just as she saw in the well earlier when he was coming back to her. He dies in her arms.

The film ends several years later with Ada, Ruby and their families celebrating Easter. Ruby has married Georgia, and the two have an infant child. Her father Stobrod is revealed to have survived, and it is revealed that Ada's night with Inman had given her a child, Grace Inman.

Cast

Awards and nominations

Renée Zellweger won the Academy Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role for her performance.

In addition, the movie was nominated for the following Academy awards:

Production

Cold Mountain, where the film is set, is a real mountain located within the Pisgah National Forest, Haywood County, North Carolina. However, it was filmed mostly in Romania, with numerous scenes filmed in Virginia, South Carolina and North Carolina. The film was one of an increasing number of Hollywood productions made in eastern Europe. This is occurring as a result of much lower costs in the region; and in this specific instance, Transylvania was less marked by modern life than the Appalachians (fewer power lines, telephone poles, paved roads and so on).

Filming locations

Editing

The film also marked a technological and industry turnaround in editing. Walter Murch edited Cold Mountain on Apple's sub-$1000 Final Cut Pro software using off the shelf G4s. This was a leap for such a big budgeted film, where expensive Avid systems are usually the standard NLE tool. His efforts on the film were documented in the 2005 book Behind the Seen: How Walter Murch Edited Cold Mountain Using Apple's Final Cut Pro and What This Means for Cinema.[2]

Reception

The film was met with generally positive reviews, receiving a 72 percent "fresh" rating on the website rottentomatoes.com, which monitors film reviews and opinions. Many critics noted the film for its realistic portrayal of the Civil War and for elaborating on the civilian aspects of the war. However, some critics felt the film was marred by an episodic quality and a morose tone which muddled the love story.

Soundtrack

See: Cold Mountain (soundtrack).

The Cold Mountain soundtrack shares producer T Bone Burnett with the soundtrack for O Brother Where Art Thou?, a largely old-time and folk album with limited radio play that still enjoyed commercial success, and garnered a Grammy. As a result, comparisons were drawn between the two albums. The Cold Mountain soundtrack, however, also employs many folk and blues elements. It features songs written by Jack White of The White Stripes (who also appeared in the film in the role of Georgia), Elvis Costello and Sting. Costello and Sting's contributions, "The Scarlet Tide" and "You Will Be My Ain True Love", were both nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Song and featured vocals by bluegrass singer Alison Krauss. Gabriel Yared's Oscar-nominated score is represented by four tracks amounting to approximately fifteen minutes of music.

See also

External links

References

Academy Awards
Best Supporting Actress
Renée Zellweger
Golden Globe Awards
Best Supporting Actress
Renée Zellweger
BAFTA Awards
Best Supporting Actress
Renée Zellweger
Best Film Music
Gabriel Yared, T-Bone Burnett

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