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Finding Forrester

 
Movies:

Finding Forrester

  • Director: Gus Van Sant
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Coming-of-Age, Urban Drama
  • Themes: Mentors, Unlikely Friendships, High School Life
  • Main Cast: Sean Connery, Rob Brown, F. Murray Abraham, Anna Paquin, Busta Rhymes
  • Release Year: 2000
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 133 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG13

Plot

In the spirit of his Oscar-winning Good Will Hunting, Gus Van Sant directs this tale of the unlikely bond that develops between an aging, reclusive novelist named Forrester (Sean Connery) -- who hasn't written anything since winning a Pulitzer Prize decades earlier -- and Jamal (Rob Brown), a 16-year-old with a hidden desire to be a writer. When Jamal is cited for his athleticism in basketball by an elite Manhattan prep school, he is forced to adapt to an environment far from his South Bronx upbringing, and a small mishap leads him to the eccentric, uneasy Forrester. After their initial apprehension of each other, they begin to fuel each other's fire for writing, and become unlikely friends despite their ages and backgrounds. Forrester's devotion to Jamal becomes enhanced when he must defend allegations of plagiarism enforced by Professor Crawford (F. Murray Abraham), jeopardizing Jamal's future. The film also features Anna Paquin, Busta Rhymes, and Zane Copeland, Jr.. ~ Jason Clark, All Movie Guide

Cast

April Grace - Ms. Joyce; Matt Damon; Michael Nouri - Dr. Spence

Credit

Darrell K. Keister - Art Director, Bernie Telsey - Casting, Francine Maisler - Casting, David Vaccari - Casting, Ann Roth - Costume Designer, David J.Webb - First Assistant Director, Gus Van Sant - Director, Valdís Óskarsdóttir - Editor, Jonathan King - Executive Producer, Dany Wolf - Executive Producer, Jane Musky - Production Designer, Harris Savides - Cinematographer, Sean Connery - Producer, Laurence Mark - Producer, Rhonda Tollefson - Producer, Susan Bode-Tyson - Set Designer, Brian Miksis - Sound/Sound Designer, Mike Rich - Screenwriter, Susan Bode-Tyson - Set Decorator

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Dead Poets Society; Gross Anatomy; Little Man Tate; Madame Sousatzka; One on One; The Paper Chase; Scent of a Woman; A Thousand Clowns; Searching for Bobby Fischer; Mr. Holland's Opus; Good Will Hunting; He Got Game; Rushmore; Wonder Boys; O; Collected Stories; Antwone Fisher; Mona Lisa Smile; Brave New Girl; A Love Song For Bobby Long; Akeelah and the Bee; Freedom Writers; Dark Matter; No Reservations; A Dog's Dream; Local Color
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Album Review: Finding Forrester
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  • Artist: Original Soundtrack
  • Rating: StarStarStar
  • Release Date: December 26, 2000
  • Type: Soundtrack
  • Genre: Soundtrack

Review

The original soundtrack to Finding Forrester, Gus Van Sant's other uplifting mentor/student drama, features a compelling mix of '60s and '70s works from Miles Davis and Ornette Coleman and an original score by Bill Frisell. Davis' "Recollection" and "Little Church" provide two of the album's more reflective moments, while his "Black Satin" and Coleman's "Happy House" offer a funky, intense contrast. Frisell's dreamy but slightly off-kilter pieces, such as "Under a Golden Sky," "Picture Book," and "Over the Rainbow," act almost as a palate cleanser between Davis' and Coleman's intense works. With its deft mix of vintage and contemporary jazz, Finding Forrester gives the film it accompanies another level of integrity. ~ Heather Phares, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Recollections Joe Zawinul Miles Davis, Jack DeJohnette, Dave Holland, John McLaughlin, Wayne Shorter, Joe Zawinul, Billy Cobham, Chick Corea (18:51)
Little Church Hermeto Pascoal Miles Davis, Jack DeJohnette, Herbie Hancock, Dave Holland, Keith Jarrett, John McLaughlin, Steve Grossman, Chick Corea (3:15)
Black Satin Miles Davis Miles Davis, Jack DeJohnette, Herbie Hancock, Collin Walcott, Badal Roy, James Mtume, David Creamer (5:15)
Under a Golden Sky Bill Frisell Bill Frisell (2:06)
Happy House Ornette Coleman Bobby Bradford, Don Cherry, Billy Higgins, Dewey Redman, Ed Blackwell, Ornette Coleman, Charlie Haden (9:45)
Over the Rainbow (Photo Book) Harold Arlen, E.Y. "Yip" Harburg Bill Frisell (2:30)
Lonely Fire [Excerpt] Miles Davis Miles Davis, Dave Holland, Bennie Maupin, John McLaughlin, Wayne Shorter, Joe Zawinul, Chick Corea (5:21)
Over the Rainbow/What a Wonderful World Harold Arlen, E.Y. "Yip" Harburg, Bob Thiele, George David Weiss Roland Cazimero, Israel Kamakawiwo'ole, Mike Muldoon, Del Beazley, Gaylord Holomalia, Melvin Amina (5:07)
Vonetta Wayne Shorter Ron Carter, Miles Davis, Herbie Hancock, Wayne Shorter, Tony Williams (5:34)
Coffaro's Theme Bill Frisell Ron Miles, Bill Frisell, Curtis Fowlkes, Eyvind Kang (4:25)
Foreigner in a Free Land Ornette Coleman The London Symphony Orchestra, Ornette Coleman, David Measham (1:19)
Beautiful E. Bill Frisell Hank Roberts, Joey Baron, Kermit Driscoll, Bill Frisell (3:24)
In a Silent Way [DJ Cam Remix] Joe Zawinul Miles Davis (5:05)

Credits

The London Symphony Orchestra (Orchestra), Bobby Bradford (Trumpet), Ron Carter (Bass), Don Cherry (Trumpet (Pocket)), Miles Davis (Trumpet), Jack DeJohnette (Drums), Carlos Garnett (Sax (Tenor)), Herbie Hancock (Piano (Electric)), Billy Higgins (Drums), Dave Holland (Bass (Electric)), Keith Jarrett (Organ), Bennie Maupin (Bass), John McLaughlin (Guitar), Dewey Redman (Sax (Tenor)), Hank Roberts (Cello), Wayne Shorter (Sax (Soprano)), Collin Walcott (Sitar), Tony Williams (Drums), Steve Grossman (Sax (Soprano)), Ron Miles (Trumpet), Roland Cazimero (Bass), Joey Baron (Drums), Airto Moreira (Percussion), Airto Moreira (Guica), Joe Zawinul (Piano (Electric)), Badal Roy (Tabla), Khalil Balakrishna (Sitar), Ed Blackwell (Drums), Milan Bertosa (Engineer), Greg Calbi (Mastering), Judy Clapp (Mixing), Billy Cobham (Triangle), Ornette Coleman (Sax (Alto)), Chick Corea (Piano (Electric)), Kermit Driscoll (Bass), Bill Frisell (Guitar (Electric)), Bill Frisell (Loop), Steve Fontano (Assistant Engineer), Curtis Fowlkes (Trombone), Tim Geelan (Engineer), Charlie Haden (Bass), Troy Halderson (Editing), Wayne Horvitz (Producer), Christian Jones (Engineer), Christian Jones (Mixing), James Jordan (Producer), James Mtume (Percussion), Teo Macero (Producer), David Measham (Conductor), Roger Moutenot (Engineer), Roger Moutenot (Mixing), Hermeto Pascoal (Drums), Hermeto Pascoal (Piano (Electric)), Hermeto Pascoal (Voices), Hermeto Pascoal (Whistle (Human)), Russ Payne (Mixing), Stan Tonkel (Engineer), Lee Townsend (Producer), Mark Wilder (Mastering), Hal Willner (Producer), Israel Kamakawiwo'ole (Ukulele), Israel Kamakawiwo'ole (Vocals), Israel Kamakawiwo'ole (Producer), Israel Kamakawiwo'ole (Hawaiian Guitar), Mike Muldoon (Percussion), Eric Liljestrand (Engineer), Eric Liljestrand (Mixing), Del Beazley (Guitar), Robert Ludwig (Mastering), Gaylord Holomalia (Keyboards), Gaylord Holomalia (Programming), Gus Van Sant (Executive Producer), Eyvind Kang (Violin), David Creamer (Guitar), Melvin Amina (Bass), Melvin Amina (Performer), Michael J. Henderson (Bass), Jon de Mello (Producer)
Wikipedia: Finding Forrester
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Finding Forrester

original film poster
Directed by Gus Van Sant
Produced by Sean Connery
Laurence Mark
Rhonda Tollefson
Written by Mike Rich
Starring Sean Connery
Rob Brown
F. Murray Abraham
Anna Paquin
Cinematography Harris Savides
Editing by Valdís Óskarsdóttir
Distributed by Columbia Pictures
Release date(s) December 19, 2000
Running time 136 min.
Gross revenue $80,049,764 [1]

Finding Forrester is a 2000 movie, written by Mike Rich and directed by Gus Van Sant, about a teenager, Jamal Wallace, played by Rob Brown, who is accepted into a prestigious private high school. He also befriends a reclusive writer, William Forrester, played by Sean Connery (who also served as one of the movie's producers).

Anna Paquin, F. Murray Abraham, and Busta Rhymes also star in supporting roles. Matt Damon makes a brief cameo appearance near the end of the film. New York poet Geoffrey Cruickshank-Hagenbuckle provided several notebooks worth of intense handwriting to portray Forrester's notebooks in the film. Principal photography was shot entirely in Manhattan, the Bronx, and Brooklyn (many Mailor Academy scenes were filmed at Regis High School on the Upper East Side of Manhattan), with some scenery and pick-up shots made in suburban Toronto, Ontario, during post-production. Parts of the film were also shot in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.[2]

The movie is also famous for a particular line in the movie's trailer. Connery utters the phrase "You're the man now, dawg," which became a popular internet meme, and was also the inspiration for the website YTMND.com.

Contents

Plot

The movie opens with 16-year-old Jamal sleeping in his bedroom, which is stacked with 'classic' books, and then jumping up to go meet his friends on the basketball court. While playing basketball, he and his friends watch a well-dressed man drive up in his BMW and, apparently concerned with the poor inner city neighborhood, carefully lock his car before delivering a brown bag of groceries to somebody in the apartment building across the street from the gazing boys. The friends all know of a recluse, William Forrester, who lives on the top floor of the building across from the schoolyard and regularly notice him watching them from his window, although they never see his face.

Just one day after at school, one of the boys challenges Jamal to sneak into the apartment. The boys dare Jamal and he sneaks into Forrester's apartment. Unusually the window is open and he climbs inside to discover the television blaring but Forrester is nowhere to be seen. He then finds and picks up a small letter opener and puts it in his backpack. Suddenly Jamal is surprised by Forrester, he runs out of the apartment, leaving his backpack.

Even after Jamal's failed burglary attempt Forrester is still watching them; Jamal sees that the mystery man has hung Jamal's backpack up in the, firmly shut, window. Soon after the man in the BMW shows up again, and Jamal introduces himself, telling the man he will not do anything to the car, suggesting that the BMW is just a car like any other, but the man tells Jamal that a BMW is not just any car, implying that being poor, Jamal would not know much about BMW. Jamal then goes on to give a mini-lecture about the history of the BMW, putting the man in his place he adds "but I guess you knew that seeing as you lease one and all". As Jamal and the man part, Jamal's backpack falls from the sky and lands next to him. He picks it up and takes it back home where he looks through to make sure all of his notebooks and materials are still there. To his surprise, he finds his writing marked up.

Jamal goes to the apartment and knocks on the door, apologizing for the previous intrusion and asking Forrester if he would look at more of his work. Forrester responds that he would like to first see 5,000 words on why Jamal should "stay the fuck out of his home", which Jamal promptly completes in his bedroom.

As part of the backstory, Jamal has just completed state required testing where it is revealed that he is an intellectually gifted student. His school counselor sets up a meeting with Jamal's mother and a recruiter from a highly selective private school, Mailer Callow, which covets Jamal for his athletic ability, as much as for his intellectual capability. The recruiter offers Jamal a scholarship, suggesting that his play on the basketball court is welcome, but not absolutely necessary.

In class, Jamal also has obstacles to hurdle, the most prominent being the expectations or lack of, by his arrogant literature teacher, Professor Crawford. Jamal watches Crawford completely destroy an obviously struggling student and defends the student by matching Crawford's hobby of starting famous quotes from authors for the students to finish. Jamal obviously know's his stuff as Crawford feels threatened, probably because nobody has ever been able to do so before, and tells Jamal to leave his class. Jamal later comes to learn that Crawford and Forrester are former colleagues and in fact, both attended Mailer Callow as students. Crawford has built a reputation as an authority on Forrester's works and had at one time attempted to publish a biography of him, which Forrester blocked. Crawford also attempted to publish his own book, but as Forrester indicates, it was rejected.

Jamal convinces Forrester to go out of the apartment and attend a game at Madison Square Garden. It begins well, but later, Forrester is separated from Jamal when the crowd leaves the stadium and Jamal finds Forrester having a severe panic attack. After leaving the game, Jamal takes William to see Yankee Stadium as a surprise. He and William go out on the field to the pitcher's mound, where William tells Jamal about his family, specifically his brother's alcoholism that leads to his death. He also explains how the subsequent deaths of his parents soon after affected him and led to him becoming a recluse.

As part of Jamal's tutelage, Forrester gives him some of his own private essays to rewrite(giving him the title and first paragraph), with the admonishment that Jamal is never to show any of this work to anyone. But when a prestigious writing contest requires some of Jamal's best work, he falls back on a particular piece of Forrester's that he re-wrote and submits it as his own, not realizing it was one of Forrester's few published works. Crawford immediately finds the parallels with Forrester's piece published in 1960 and brings Jamal up on plagiarism charges, to which Jamal has to defend himself against without admitting his friendship with Forrester.

Forrester is angry at Jamal for breaking his promise, while Jamal is angry at Forrester for closing himself off to the world and not having the courage to re-enter it. Forrester indicates there is no reason for him to come to Jamal's assistance and admit their relationship to Crawford, which Jamal sees as another act of cowardice, although he maintains the secrecy of their friendship.

On the basketball court, Jamal also faces another truth: that his scholarship and presence at the school was, in fact, based more on the school boards wish to win basketball championships, knowledge that is made clear to him by Dr. Pearce at a formal party and later one of Jamal's games. Pearce suggests to Jamal that as long as he can win the basketball championship, the plagiarism charge will go away. When Jamal comes to realize his intellectual gifts have less to do with remaining at Mailer Callow than his ability to lead the team to a championship, he comes to a crossroad where he wants to decide between following his literary heart or the path his physical skills can take him. At the championship game, Jamal may have purposely missed 2 critical free throws in spite of Crawford's hostility towards him, or he could have just missed them.

When the awards ceremony for the literary contest are held, where the contestants read their own work, Jamal is discouraged from attending, but attends anyway, where Crawford's presence prevents Jamal from reading his essay. During the literary contest, Forrester pays a surprise visit to the school to address the professor's accusations in person with subtlety: he reads what everyone assumes was his own unpublished writing, then reveals it as Jamal's work, admitting his friendship with Jamal and thereby proving his innocence. The charges are dropped over Crawford's objections, and Jamal is reinstated.

Afterwards, Forrester thanks Jamal and tells him of his desire to return to his homeland of Scotland.

The movie then cuts to Jamal's senior year of high school, when he is a successful student and has received many enrollment offers from prestigious universities. One day, Forrester's solicitor schedules a meeting with Jamal, and reveals that Forrester has died of cancer; Jamal learns that Forrester was terminally ill while they knew each other. In accordance with Forrester's will, Jamal is given a package and a letter, in which Forrester thanks Jamal for helping him rekindle his desire to live. The package contains the manuscript for Forrester's second, and last novel, called Sunset, for which Jamal is to write the foreword.

Critical response

When Finding Forrester opened in December 2000, it received mostly positive reviews. It garnered two thumbs up from Roger Ebert and Richard Roeper. Roeper considered it one of the 10 best films of 2000. Rotten Tomatoes reported that 74% of critics gave the film a positive review, based on a sample of 120 reviews.[3]

Box office performance

The movie received limited release on December 22, 2000 in 200 theaters, grossing $701,207 in the opening weekend. It later received commercial release where it opened at #7 in 2002 theaters, grossing $11,112,139 in the opening weekend. It went on to gross $51,804,714 domestically and $28,245,050 from the Foreign market for a worldwide total of $80,049,764.[1]

Music

The only track that appears in the movie that is not on the soundtrack is the music played during the Bike Ride that Forrester takes. The song is from Schulwerk by Carl Orff (more specifically the Gassenhauer track) it was arranged and produced by Bill Brown.[4]

Soundtrack Track Listing[5]

  1. "Recollections" (Billy Cobham, Chick Corea, Miles Davis, Jack DeJohnette, Dave Holland, John McLaughlin, Wayne Shorter, Joe Zawinul)
  2. "Little Church" (Chick Corea, Miles Davis, Jack DeJohnette, Steve Grossman, Herbie Hancock, Dave Holland, Keith Jarrett, John McLaughlin)
  3. "Black Satin" (David Creamer, Miles Davis, Jack DeJohnette, Herbie Hancock, James Mtume, Badal Roy, Collin Walcott)
  4. "Under a Golden Sky" (Bill Frisell)
  5. "Happy House" (Ed Blackwell, Bobby Bradford, Don Cherry, Ornette Coleman, Charlie Haden, Billy Higgins, Dewey Redman)
  6. "Over the Rainbow (Photo Book)" (Bill Frisell)
  7. "Lonely Fire" [Excerpt]( Chick Corea, Miles Davis, Dave Holland, Bennie Maupin, John McLaughlin, Wayne Shorter, Joe Zawinul)
  8. "Over the Rainbow/What a Wonderful World" (Israel Kamakawiwo'ole)
  9. "Vonetta" (Ron Carter, Miles Davis, Herbie Hancock, Wayne Shorter, Tony Williams)
  10. "Coffaro's Theme" (Curtis Fowlkes, Bill Frisell, Eyvind Kang, Ron Miles)
  11. "Foreigner in a Free Land" (Ornette Coleman, The London Symphony Orchestra, David Measham)
  12. "Beautiful E." (Joey Baron, Kermit Driscoll, Bill Frisell, Hank Roberts)
  13. "In a Silent Way [DJ Cam Remix]" (Miles Davis)

References

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Movies. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Finding Forrester" Read more