Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

The Lake House

 
Movies:

The Lake House

  • Director: Alejandro Agresti
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Romance
  • Movie Type: Romantic Fantasy
  • Themes: Supernatural Romance, Star-Crossed Lovers
  • Main Cast: Keanu Reeves, Sandra Bullock, Dylan Walsh, Shohreh Aghdashloo, Christopher Plummer
  • Release Year: 2006
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 98 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG

Plot

Two people develop an unusual relationship that bends the boundaries of time and place in this romantic fantasy. Kate Forster (Sandra Bullock) is a doctor who lives in a beautiful home by a lake. Forced to move elsewhere, she requests that any correspondence that arrives at the lake house be passed on to her new address. To her surprise, she soon receives a romantic note from Alex Burnham (Keanu Reeves), an architect who lives in the cottage she once called home. However, a look at the postmark on the letter reveals that he lived at the home two years before she did, and that somehow they've come in contact with one another through a space in time. A remake of Lee Hyun-seung's acclaimed Korean romance Il Mare (aka Siworae), The Lake House was the first American production from Argentinean filmmaker Alejandro Agresti; the supporting cast includes Christopher Plummer, Dylan Walsh, and Lynn Collins. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Review

Love stories seem to always be about finding the right love at the wrong time. The Lake House takes that to heart by having the protagonists fall in love with each other even though they live in different times. Well, actually they do live at the same time, and even in the same place, only two years apart from each other. They exchange letters through a magic mailbox that allows the letters they exchange to transcend time. For a film with this fantastical a concept to work, the filmmakers need to figure out a couple of aspects. First, you either have to play the fantasy element to the hilt, leaving any semblance of reality, or you have to ground the film in a very familiar world and sprinkle just enough magical realism over it all that the audience buys in to the conceit. Director Alejandro Agresti opts mostly for the former, shooting everything with a gauzy beauty, and allowing the leads, Keanu Reeves and Sandra Bullock, to look beautiful even when the characters feel miserable. One of the other hurdles that the screenplay clears is figuring out how to get the two characters to share the screen even though their individual stories transpire in different timelines. Luckily, the best scene of the movie brings the two of them face to face right in the middle of the film, and the actors smartly underplay the scene. Reeves and Bullock do have excellent chemistry together, her all-American girl-next-door appeal grounds his physical beauty, and when the two do get to be in the same place at the same time the film fulfills its goals, even if the occasionally sluggish setup might not be as gripping. The Lake House does not have the authority to make a viewer suspend disbelief, but anyone willing to shut that off on their own will enjoy it. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide

Cast

Ebon Moss-Bachrach - Henry Wyler; Willeke van Ammelrooy - Kate's Mother; Lynn Collins - Mona

Credit

Tomas Voth - Art Director, Kevin Kavanaugh - Art Director, Sonny Mallhi - Co-producer, Deena Appel - Costume Designer, Josh McLaglen - First Assistant Director, L. Justin Muller - First Assistant Director, Alejandro Agresti - Director, Lynzee Klingman - Editor, Alejandro Brodersohn - Editor, Mary McLaglen - Executive Producer, Erwin Stoff - Executive Producer, Bruce Berman - Executive Producer, Robert Kirby - Executive Producer, Dana Goldberg - Executive Producer, Rachel Portman - Composer (Music Score), John Houlihan - Musical Direction/Supervision, Nathan Crowley - Production Designer, Alar Kivilo - Cinematographer, Doug Davison - Producer, Roy Lee - Producer, Craig Jackson - Set Designer, Scott D. Smith - Sound/Sound Designer, David Auburn - Screenwriter, Jason Piccioni - Visual Effects Supervisor, Richard S. Lederer - Second Assistant Director, Frank Gaeta - Supervising Sound Editor, WBA Visual Effects - Visual Effects, Meg Everist - Set Decorator

Similar Movies

Ditto; Somewhere in Time; Forever Young; Rouge; Frequency; Love Letter; Truly, Madly, Deeply; Happy Accidents; Prelude to a Kiss
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: The Lake House (film)
Top
The Lake House

Original Theatrical Poster
Directed by Alejandro Agresti
Produced by Roy Lee
Doug Davison
Co-Producer:
Sonny Mallhi
Executive Producer:
Bruce Berman
Erwin Stoff
Dana Goldberg
Mary McLaglen
Written by David Auburn
Starring Keanu Reeves
Sandra Bullock
Shohreh Aghdashloo
Dylan Walsh
and
Christopher Plummer
Music by Rachel Portman
Paul McCartney
Cinematography Alar Kivilo
Editing by Alejandro Brodersohn
Studio Warner Bros.
Vertigo Entertainment
Village Roadshow Pictures
Sound for Film
Distributed by Warner Bros.
Release date(s) US June 16, 2006
Running time US 105 min
Country United States
Language English
Budget US $40 million
Gross revenue $114,830,111 [1]

The Lake House is a 2006 American romantic drama film remake of the Korean motion picture Il Mare (2000). It was written by David Auburn, directed by Alejandro Agresti, and stars Keanu Reeves and Sandra Bullock as Alex Wyler and Kate Forster, respectively an architect living in 2004 and a doctor living in 2006. The two are introduced and share correspondence across the years by leaving letters in a mailbox at the lake house they have both lived in at separate points in time. This film also reunites Reeves and Bullock for the first time in a film since they co-starred in Speed in 1994.

Contents

Plot

It is a winter morning in 2006, and Dr. Kate Forster is leaving suburban Wisconsin, where she completed her residency, as she prepares to take a job at a busy Chicago hospital. She is reluctant to leave behind the refuge of the woods and the beautiful house she's been renting, an artfully designed home with glass walls that overlook a placid lake. As she goes, Kate leaves a note in the mailbox for the next tenant, asking whomever to forward her mail and pointing out that the paint-embedded paw prints on the walkway leading into the house and the box in the attic were already there when she arrived.

Alex Wyler is a talented but frustrated architect supervising the construction of cookie-cutter tract housing at a nearby site. He arrives at the lake house and finds it neglected - and with no signs of paw prints anywhere. The house has special meaning for Alex, having been built by his estranged father, a celebrated architect who let his career grow at the expense of his family, and himself. Like Kate, Alex feels a sense of peace at the lake house and commits to restoring it. He doesn't think twice about Kate's note until days later when, as he paints the walkway's railings, a stray dog runs through his paint and leaves fresh paw prints right where Kate said they would be. Baffled, Alex writes her back, pointing out that the house was unoccupied before he came and wondering how she could have known about paw prints that weren't yet there. Kate, who just left the house a week earlier, imagines he is playing some kind of joke on her, and she fires back a curt reply. Just for argument's sake, she asks, what day is it there? "April 14th, 2004," Alex answers. But for Kate, it's April 14, 2006. The same day, two years apart.

As Kate and Alex continue their correspondence through the lake house's mystical mailbox, they confirm that they are, strange as it may seem, living two years apart, and each at a time in their lives when they're struggling to make a new start. Sharing this unusual bond, they reveal more of themselves to one another with each passing week. In one of her letters, Kate mentions a Jane Austen book, Persuasion, she had accidentally left at a train station in 2004. Alex goes to the station and finds it there on a bench. Seeing Kate for the first time as she boards the train, Alex keeps the book, deciding he will return it to her in person some day. Alex then sends Kate an annotated map of Chicago and invites her to take a walking tour of his favorite places one Saturday morning. Kate wishes they could spend time together and near the end of the tour she finds a message sprayed as graffiti on a wall: "Kate, I am here with you. Thank you for a lovely Saturday together." One day in 2004, while leaving work, Alex's dog runs away. Alex pursues and meets Morgan who invites Alex to Kate's surprise birthday party. At the party he talks to Kate about the book and she summarises it as being about two people who wait for each other. They dance and end up kissing which is witnessed by Morgan and Alex's girlfriend.

In later correspondence Kate recriminates Alex for not saying anything but Alex rightly points out that she would not have known who he was. Determined to bridge the distance between them at last and unravel the mystery behind their extraordinary connection, they tempt fate by arranging to meet. Alex makes a reservation at Il Mare (Italian for "The Sea"), an elegant restaurant (whose name is an homage to the original Korean motion picture), for a date two years in Alex's future — but only a day away for Kate. When she shows up full of wonderful expectations for their dinner date she waits but Alex fails to appear. Kate is heartbroken and she begins to wonder if she has been making a mistake focusing so much of her emotional energy on a man who, in her time, had clearly moved on. She tells Alex about a day right after she left the lake house; an unusually warm Valentine's Day when she'd spent time with her mother in Daley Plaza and witnessed a terrible traffic accident and held a man who died in her arms. Life was too short, she now knew, to wait for what might be. She asks Alex not to contact her again, to "Let me let you go", and stops coming to the mailbox for his letters.

Alex decides to quit the lake house and move in with his brother in Chicago, leaving all of Kate's letters packed neatly in a box in the attic. The dog, Jack, runs away as Alex packs — only to appear at the side of Kate's old boyfriend Morgan, just after Alex passes along the house keys, reminding him of Kate’s wishes to one day live on the lake. The 2006 Kate renews her relationship with Morgan, and they live together in her Chicago apartment for over a year. One afternoon, irritated with his inattention and preoccupation with work, she walks into the bedroom, where a hollow-sounding area under a floorboard finally gets her attention. Stepping hard on one end, she pops the board loose, revealing a small package hidden underneath. It is the Jane Austen book (Persuasion) that Alex retrieved for her from the train station. He has left a flower marking a specific passage: "There could have been no two hearts so open, no tastes so similar, no feelings so in unison...." Kate holds the book to her heart. One unusually warm winter day, Alex and his brother leave their office, heading out to lunch. When Alex suggests they meet up after work for a beer, Henry reminds him that it's Valentine's Day and he has plans with his girlfriend. Valentine’s Day 2006...something clicks in Alex's memory and he takes off for the lake house.

For Kate, it’s Valentine's Day 2008, and she and Morgan arrange to meet at an architectural firm to review renovation plans for an old apartment she wants to buy. Morgan, unenthused about both the project and the idea of moving, has been so busy with work, he has forgotten to get Kate a Valentines card. After they meet with the architect, Kate notices an illustration hanging on the conference room wall - it's a drawing of the lake house. The young man explains that it was drawn by his brother Alex Wyler who, by coincidence, was killed in a traffic accident two years ago to the day. Kate quickly realizes why Alex never met her at the restaurant; he was the man who died in her arms in Daley Plaza. She rushes to the lake house, leaving a bewildered Morgan behind, and frantically writes a note for Alex. Don't go looking for her, she begs him. Wait for another two years and come to the lake house, instead. It is in this very note, in fact, that she first explicitly professes her love to him. She puts the note into the mailbox and raises the flag.

But Alex has gone off to find her - and sees her sitting there in Daley Plaza on that unseasonably mild Valentine's Day in 2006. As he seems about to step into the street, he raises his hand and rereads the note from Kate, begging him to wait for her. "I love you", she writes, "and it's taken me all this time to realize it but I love you". Alex wisely decides to remain on the sidewalk, splitting himself off from the original timeline. Kate falls to her knees, clutching onto the mailbox stand, sure she was too late, but then the mailbox flag slowly lowers - Alex has picked up her note. Soon she sees a vehicle arriving beyond the high grass and then a figure walking toward her on the gravel path, and it turns out to be Alex. "You waited!", she cries as they begin to kiss each other. And then they turn and, still huddled together, proceed up the wooden walkway toward the lakehouse.

Cast

Production

The film is set and filmed in the Chicago area. The downtown scenes are in the Loop. The scene where Kate and Morgan go to Henry's office, and Kate's dramatic exit down the stairs is filmed at the Chicago Architecture Foundation. The scene where Henry and Alex talk on the street after being in their father's office is filmed on the 400 block of South Michigan Ave, in front of the Fine Arts Building and the Auditorium Theater. The scenes at Morgan's house, the train station, and when Alex chases the dog, Jack, across a bridge are all filmed in Riverside, IL a small town on the outskirts of Chicago. It is known for its historic houses, and several Frank Lloyd Wright buildings. The train station in the movie is the real station of Riverside, and the bridge that Alex crosses, chasing Jack is called the "Swinging Bridge" to Riverside residents. It crosses the Des Plaines River. The tract housing/construction site scenes were filmed in Aurora, IL in early 2005, in what now has become the Madison Park community.

Music

The Lake House (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)
Soundtrack by Rachel Portman
Released June 20, 2006
Genre Soundtrack
Label Lakeshore Records
Professional reviews

A soundtrack album of the film was released in 2006.

  1. "This Never Happened Before" - Paul McCartney
  2. "(I Can't Seem To) Make You Mine" - The Clientele
  3. "Time Has Told Me" - Nick Drake
  4. "Ant Farm" - Eels
  5. "It's Too Late" - Carole King
  6. "The Lakehouse" - Rachel Portman
  7. "Pawprints" - Rachel Portman
  8. "Tough Week" - Rachel Portman
  9. "Mailbox" - Rachel Portman
  10. "Sunsets" - Rachel Portman
  11. "Alex's Father" - Rachel Portman
  12. "Il Mare" - Rachel Portman
  13. "Tell Me More" - Rachel Portman
  14. "She's Gone" - Rachel Portman
  15. "Wait For Me" - Rachel Portman
  16. "You Waited" - Rachel Portman
  17. "I Waited" - Rachel Portman

Songs appearing in the film, but not on the soundtrack include:

The film trailer also features the song "Somewhere Only We Know" by the band Keane. It is available on the album Hopes and Fears.

Box office

In its opening weekend, the film grossed a total of $13.6 million, ranking fourth in the United States box office. As of October 1, 2006, the movie has grossed $52,330,111 domestically, and $114,830,111 worldwide.

On September 26, 2006, the movie became the first to be simultaneously released on DVD, Blu-ray Disc and HD DVD (courtesy of Warner Home Video).

Critical reception

According to the website Rotten Tomatoes, one third of the critics gave the movie a positive review. Many critics have expressed dissatisfaction in the plot's internal logic. Alex breaks Kate's timeline twice during the film, leading some to interpret events as a time paradox. Other critics have ignored their doubts or have found no reason to follow a single-timeline interpretation of events. Positive reviews concentrate on the film's cinematography, use of Chicago architecture, and the depiction of the characters' feelings of loneliness and separation.

USA Today critic Claudia Puig wrote, "The Lake House is one of the more befuddling movies of recent years. The premise makes no sense, no matter how you turn it around in your head.".

Roger Ebert, while pointing out the movie's logical inconsistencies, wrote, "Never mind, I tell you, never mind!" Ebert gave a positive review (3.5 stars out of 4) noting, "What I respond to in the movie is its fundamental romantic impulse."

On August 18, 2006 Reeves and Bullock won a Teen Choice Award for "Choice Liplock" for The Lake House.

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