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Home Room

 
Movies:

Home Room

  • Director: Paul F. Ryan
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Psychological Drama, Teen Movie
  • Themes: School Violence, Unlikely Friendships, High School Life
  • Main Cast: Nathan West, Busy Philipps, Erika Christensen, Victor Garber, Holland Taylor, Ken Jenkins, Raphael Sbarge
  • Release Year: 2003
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 132 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

American independent filmmaker Paul F. Ryan makes his feature debut with the psychological drama Home Room. The students of Valley High School try to get on with their lives in the aftermath of a traumatic school shooting in which nine students were killed. Even though the perpetrator is dead, the townspeople still want to find some answers. Detective Martin Van Zandt (Victor Garber) decides to interrogate high school student Alicia Browning (Busy Philipps), who was present during the attack. Because of her cynical attitude and dark fashion choices, she is viewed as a possible threat. Principal Robbins (James Pickens Jr.) sentences her to regular hospital visits with the pretty and popular Deanna Cartwright (Erika Christensen), who was seriously injured in the attack. Alicia and Deanna overcome their initial differences and develop a nurturing friendship with psychological help from Dr. Hollander (Holland Taylor). ~ Andrea LeVasseur, All Movie Guide

Cast

James Pickens, Jr. - Principal Robbins; Richard Gilliland - Mr. Cartwright; Arthur Taxier - Mr. Browning; Nathan West - James; Agnes Bruckner - Cathy; Constance Zimmer - Assistant Kelly; Theodore Borders - Terrance; Ben Gould - Doug

Credit

Nicole Lobart - Art Director, G. Charles Wright - Casting, Paul F. Ryan - Co-producer, Russ Matthews - Co-producer, Julia Bartholomew - Costume Designer, Lawrence Kane - First Assistant Director, Paul F. Ryan - Director, Paul F. Ryan - Editor, Mike Shapiro - Composer (Music Score), Dia Dibble - Makeup, Johanna Vivstam - Production Designer, Rebecca Baehler - Cinematographer, Benjamin Ormand - Producer, Bill Jenkins - Sound/Sound Designer, Paul F. Ryan - Screenwriter, Darren Genet - Additional Cinematography, Jay Nierenberg - Supervising Sound Editor

Similar Movies

Elephant; River's Edge; Paradise Lost: The Child Murders at Robin Hood Hills; The Best Little Girl in the World; Out of the Blue; Christiane F.; À Nos Amours; Heart of America: Homeroom
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Wikipedia: Home Room (film)
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Home Room
Directed by Paul F. Ryan
Produced by Ben Ormand
Written by Paul F. Ryan
Starring Erika Christensen
Busy Philipps
Victor Garber
Agnes Bruckner
Music by Mike Shapiro
Distributed by DEJ Productions
Release date(s) 12 April 2002
Running time 133 min.
Language English

Home Room is an independent film starring Erika Christensen, Busy Philipps and Victor Garber. It premiered in the Taos Talking Pictures Film Festival on 12 April 2002, and made its limited theatrical release on 5 September 2003.

Contents

Plot

A school massacre leaves nine students dead and one student named Deanna Cartwright (Christensen) seriously injured. The shooter himself is dead, shot by police during the confrontation after the actual shooting, and the only witness (and possible suspect) is Alicia Browning (Philipps), a Goth student who is now under the attention of the detective in charge of the case, Det. Martin Van Zandt (Garber).

The school principal asks Alicia to visit Deanna in the hospital. Right away, their differences are evident. Alicia is an outsider from a single-parent family who shuns the society that similarly shuns her, while Deanna is from a wealthy family, gets good grades and is popular with her classmates.

At first, Deanna seems upbeat and cheerful, but soon it becomes apparent that beneath this exterior are psychological scars left behind by the incident. Alicia starts to empathize with her, as she herself is battling her own demons as well, including a previous suicide attempt. Through these similar emotional bonds, the two form an unlikely friendship as they both try to cope with their separate psychological problems.

Home Room and Columbine

Even though he started writing the script before the event, director Paul F. Ryan later based the film on the Columbine High School massacre; the film was released only three years after the incident. Ryan and Christensen visited Columbine High School before the film's release to speak to students, faculty and parents, who received a private screening of the film. The response was generally positive and Ryan has since returned as a guest of the school twice. [1]

While a large part of the public wishes to figure out why such massacres happen, some have lauded Home Room simply for not explaining why they happen; the film does not place blame on violent video games or movies, and concludes that finding a single reason for these events is impossible.

In addition, the film focuses on what happens to the community long after the news crews have left. In an interview, Ryan explains, "What changed my mind was watching what happened in Littleton afterwards. CNN reported the story for about two weeks, then left. The rest of America moved on, but the people in Littleton didn’t. How do you start living your life again after such a terrible thing? [1]

See also

References

External links


 
 

 

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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Home Room (film)" Read more