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Down in the Valley

 
Movies:

Down in the Valley

  • Director: David Jacobson
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Psychological Drama, Psychological Thriller
  • Themes: Dangerous Attraction, Fathers and Daughters, Star-Crossed Lovers
  • Main Cast: Edward Norton, David Morse, Evan Rachel Wood, Rory Culkin, John Diehl, Bruce Dern
  • Release Year: 2005
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 125 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

A romance between a teenage girl and a thirtysomething drifter takes the young woman down a dangerous and unexpected path in this independent drama. Tobe (Evan Rachel Wood) is a pretty 18-year-old whose father, Wade (David Morse), is the sheriff of a town in California's San Fernando Valley. Tobe is driving to the beach with some friends when she stops at a filling station and meets gas jockey Harlan (Edward Norton), who dresses like a cowpoke and claims to have recently relocated to Los Angeles from South Dakota. Harlan is immediately and obviously taken with Tobe, and when she asks him to tag along for the day, he impulsively quits his job to follow her. Tobe and Harlan soon become a couple, but Wade is convinced Harlan is not all he claims to be, and Tobe begins to wonder if her father might be right when Harlan takes her horseback riding and their date is cut short after police inform them the horses have been stolen from an rancher (Bruce Dern) whom Harlan claims is a friend - and who promptly turns up with a gun to confront both of them, insisting that he has never seen Harlan before. Tobe's suspicions grow when Harlan offers to teach her little brother, Lonnie (Rory Culkin), how to shoot using a pair of real .45 revolvers, as his actions become less charming and more worrisome. Leading man Edward Norton also served as producer on this project. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Cast

Geoffrey Lewis - Sheridan; Muse Watson - Bill Sr.; Kat Dennings - April; Aaron Fors - Jeremy; Hunter Parrish - Kris; Aviva - Sherri; Heather Ashleigh - Shell

Credit

Michael Atwell - Art Director, Mike Upton - Co-producer, Bill Migliore - Co-producer, Marc Schaberg - Co-producer, Joe Ginier - Co-producer, Jacqueline West - Costume Designer, Chad Rosen - First Assistant Director, Dave Halls - First Assistant Director, David Jacobson - Director, Lynzee Klingman - Editor, Michael Hofacre - Editor, Stavros Merjos - Executive Producer, Sam Nazarian - Executive Producer, Jay Faires - Musical Direction/Supervision, Matt Aberly - Musical Direction/Supervision, Peter Salett - Songwriter, Franco-Giacomo Carbone - Production Designer, Enrique Chediak - Cinematographer, Edward Norton - Producer, Stavros Merjos - Producer, Adam Rosenfelt - Producer, Holly Wiersma - Producer, Steven A. Morrow - Sound/Sound Designer, Scott Sanders - Sound/Sound Designer, David Jacobson - Screenwriter, Wolfgang Held - Second Unit Camera

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Wikipedia: Down in the Valley (film)
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Down in the Valley
Directed by David Jacobson
Produced by David Jacobson
Stavros Merjos
Bill Migliore
Edward Norton
Adam Rosenfelt
Holly Wiersma
Written by David Jacobson
Starring Edward Norton
Evan Rachel Wood
David Morse
Music by Peter Salett
Distributed by ThinkFilm
Release date(s) May 13, 2005 (Cannes Film Festival)
May 2006 (limited release)
Running time 125 min.
Language English
Budget $8,000,000 US

Down in the Valley is a movie starring Edward Norton, Evan Rachel Wood, David Morse and Rory Culkin. The film made its debut at the Cannes Film Festival on May 13, 2005, and made its limited theatrical release in North America in May 2006.

Contents

Plot

Set in modern-day San Fernando Valley, the film begins with rebellious teenager October "Tobe" (Wood), going for a walk with her younger brother, Lonnie (Culkin). The next day, Tobe goes to the beach with friends and when they stop for gasoline they are assisted by Harlan (Norton), a young man, though much older than Tobe - who affects a folksy, cowboy style. Tobe invites much-older Harlan to the beach. He accepts, and while at the beach, they share a passionate kiss. Afterwards, Tobe goes to his house and engages in sexual activities with Harlan. He then decides to take her on a real date which involves him and Tobe taking Lonnie to get something to eat. Later on that night they go on their "real" date dancing then later meeting up with Tobe's friends for another party. That is when he takes drugs under the influence of Tobe. She returns home the next day; having returned home long after she was expected, her father becomes enraged and she retreats to her room. He attempts to talk with her, and when she refuses to open the door, he pounds on the door and leaves visible damage.

Tobe continues to see Harlan. Her father's rage increases, and he manages to shatter her bedroom window. The romantically involved couple ride a horse that supposedly belongs to one of Harlan's friends named "Charlie." Upon returning, Charlie (Bruce Dern) claims he has never met Harlan and that the horse was stolen. The couple are held in police custody until Wade comes to pick up Tobe. She tells Harlan that they should no longer see each other. Harlan, however, is persistent. He takes out Lonnie to shoot guns without Wade's permission and is confronted by Lonnie's father, who is armed, threatening Harlan to leave his children alone.

Harlan is evicted from his apartment after shooting at his reflection in a mirror, imagining a Wild West style "shoot-out" scene. It is made clear at this point that he is, by some degree, mentally unstable or delusional. After an awkward incident at a local synagogue, where he is abruptly ushered out, he breaks into, presumably, his father or foster father's house, who is revealed to be a Hasidic Jew. He leaves the letter he has been narrating throughout the movie after taking multiple Jewish memorabilia, and the contents of a box, in a closet, inscribed with his name. He breaks into Tobe's house and packs a bag so they can run away. When Tobe comes home to find him, she is dumbfounded, happy to see him at first, but slowly realizes he is deranged and tells him she doesn't want to leave her family and that he should go. At that point, Harlann shoots her in the stomach, whether intentionally or by misfiring it is not clear.

When Tobe's father returns home to find Tobe alone on her bed, barely alive, he suspects Harlan, who has failed an attempt at calling 911 and run away. Wade rushes his wounded daughter to the hospital, where she is attached to a breathing machine and remains in a coma. Harlan, who is covered in Tobe's blood, then shoots himself in the side to conceal Tobe's blood and also make it look like it was Wade who had shot Tobe and then shot at him. He finds Lonnie and talks him into going away. He convinces Lonnie that it was really Wade who shot Tobe, and that Harlan was wounded while trying to stop him. Tobe regains consciousness at the hospital and Wade realizes that Lonnie has been taken by Harlan. He pursues them. At night while Harlan and Lonnie are by a fire, Wade, Charlie and a detective named Sheridan arrive. Harlan shoots Charlie before riding off with Lonnie.

They stumble upon a Western motion picture set where filming has just begun. Wade and Sheridan arrive with two more cops. A shootout ensues in which Harlan guns down detective Sheridan and one of the cops. Harlan and Lonnie escape to a housing development under construction, where Wade finds them and another shootout ensues. Wade shoots Harlan to death to the horror of Lonnie.

Tobe and Lonnie (presumably a month or so later) are driven by Wade to a place where Tobe and Harlan had a pleasant day. Tobe is holding a box that contains her former lover's ashes. Her brother asks her what they should say about him. She replies, "Don't say anything, just think it," and scatters the ashes.

Cast

Actor Role
Edward Norton Harlan Fairfax Curruthers
Evan Rachel Wood October (Tobe)
David Morse Wade
Rory Culkin Lonnie (Twig)
Bruce Dern Charlie
John Diehl Steve
Geoffrey Lewis Sheridan
Elizabeth Peña Gale
Kat Dennings April
Hunter Parrish Kris
Aviva Sherri
Aaron Fors Jeremy

Writing

Writer David Jacobson was inspired to write this film by his childhood in the San Fernando Valley. He commented that there was never much to do except throw things onto the highway (which possibly inspired a deleted scene from the film titled Don't Look), have dirt clod fights, and spending many hot summer days at the local cinema with friends, watching the same films over and over. One favorite was Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, which he watched seventeen times. Jacobson also has noted that he and his sister were mild backgrounds for Tobe and Lonnie. The script was written with loose scenes, and is considered by Jacobson himself to be some of his lighter work.

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