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Waking Up in Reno

 
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Waking Up in Reno

  • Directors: Jordan Brady; Jonathan Brady
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Movie Type: Comedy of Manners, Road Movie
  • Themes: Faltering Friendships, Infidelity, Crumbling Marriages
  • Main Cast: Billy Bob Thornton, Charlize Theron, Patrick Swayze, Natasha Richardson, Holmes Osborne
  • Release Year: 2001
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 91 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

Country singer Dwight Yoakam is a co-producer of this Miramax comedy about marital infidelity among the Southern redneck set. Auto dealer Lonnie Earl (Billy Bob Thornton) and his wife, Darlene (Natasha Richardson), are best friends with good-natured Roy (Patrick Swayze) and his spitfire wife, Candy (Charlize Theron), who's ovulating and trying to become pregnant. When the quartet of Arkansas natives decides to take an SUV cross-country to a monster truck show in Reno, NV, an alarming secret is revealed: Lonnie Earl and Candy have been having an affair. The revelation comes as a shock to the guileless Roy and much put-upon Darlene, who absconds with her husband's credit cards for a spending spree that includes designer boutiques and a Tony Orlando concert. Meanwhile, Candy's quest to have a baby takes on a new dimension in light of her extracurricular activities with Lonnie Earl. Waking Up in Reno (2002) is based on a script by longtime screenwriting partners/actors Brent Briscoe and Mark Fauser, who also play supporting roles in the film. ~ Karl Williams, All Movie Guide

Review

Waking Up in Reno was originally entitled Wakin' Up in Reno, but the King's English "g" was affixed on the end, apparently in an attempt to make it seem less provincially Southern. Jordan Brady's film actually succeeds in that regard without any title finagling, respecting its quartet of essentially good-natured but flawed protagonists whose close friendships have made them recklessly familiar with each other's spouses. Once the film gets going on the road to Reno, it unfolds as a nice character study that steadily builds toward a third-act blowup that's zanier than it needed to be, but still pretty heartfelt. Even though Miramax showed little confidence in the film by delaying its release several times, the balanced script justifies the leap of faith shown by its talented cast. Billy Bob Thornton, Charlize Theron, and Natasha Richardson have frequently been recognized for their skills, but the much-maligned Patrick Swayze puts forward a deceptively subtle performance that suggests his resurgence in the previous year's Donnie Darko was no fluke. The strength of the script is that it never needs to go outside this foursome to sustain interest. Co-writers Brent Briscoe and Mark Fauser pepper the journey with set pieces that straddle the line between straight comedy and telling character development. One wouldn't want to over-praise Waking Up in Reno, and the hasty ending gives enough pause to prevent that from happening. But for a movie with dismal-looking trailers that was lucky to get off the scrap heap, it's pleasing stuff. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide

Cast

Chelcie Ross - Fred Bush; Penélope Cruz - Brenda (Spanish Woman); Tony Orlando - Himself; Wayne Federman - Ronnie; Billy O'Sullivan - Lonnie III; Brent Briscoe - Russell Whitehead; Mark Fauser

Credit

John DeMeo - Art Director, Emily Schweber - Casting, Bruce Heller - Co-producer, Doug Hall - Costume Designer, Jim Hensz - First Assistant Director, Jordan Brady - Director, Jonathan Brady - Director, Jonathan Brown - Second Unit Director, Lisa Churgin - Editor, Jonathan Gordon - Executive Producer, Bob Weinstein - Executive Producer, Harvey Weinstein - Executive Producer, Jeremy Kramer - Executive Producer, Marty Stuart - Composer (Music Score), Michele Kuznetsky - Musical Direction/Supervision, Mary Ramos - Musical Direction/Supervision, Jeannine Oppewall - Production Designer, William A. Fraker - Cinematographer, Dwight Yoakam - Producer, Ben Myron - Producer, Robert Salerno - Producer, Jay R. Hart - Set Designer, Paul Ledford - Sound/Sound Designer, Brent Briscoe - Screenwriter, Mark Fauser - Screenwriter, Jonathan Brown - Additional Cinematography, Terry Rodman - Supervising Sound Editor, Brian T. Best - Supervising Sound Editor

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Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice; Daddy's Dyin'... Who's Got the Will?; Poor White Trash; Sordid Lives; Inbred Rednecks; Jersey Guy; The Good Girl; Chooch
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Waking Up in Reno

DVD cover
Directed by Jordan Brady
Produced by Ben Myron
Robert Salerno
Dwight Yoakam
Written by Brent Briscoe
Mark Fauser
Starring Natasha Richardson
Billy Bob Thornton
Patrick Swayze
Charlize Theron
Music by Marty Stuart
Cinematography William A. Fraker
Editing by Lisa Zeno Churgin
Distributed by Miramax Films
Release date(s) October 25, 2002
Running time 91 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Gross revenue $267,109 (US) [1]

Waking Up in Reno is a 2002 American comedy drama film directed by Jordan Brady. The screenplay by Brent Briscoe and Mark Fauser focuses on two redneck couples taking a road trip from Little Rock to Reno to see a monster truck rally.

Contents

Plot

Lonnie Earl Dodd is a Little Rock car dealer who stars in his own cheesey television commercials. He and his wife Darlene are best friends with Roy and Candy Kirkendall, who are trying to start a family. When the two couples decide to drive cross-country to see a monster truck rally, Lonnie Earl pulls a new SUV off his lot and the four set off. En route, they stop at an Amarillo, Texas restaurant where Lonnie Earl is determined to win a free dinner by consuming a 72-ounce steak and all the trimmings within an hour. Darlene longs to see the Grand Canyon, but Lonnie Earl insists they stick to their schedule and refuses to fulfill her dream. It becomes increasingly clear Darlene is living timidly in her husband's shadow, kowtowing to his demands and accepting his verbal and emotional abuse without complaint.

In Reno, a fortune teller tells Candy she is expecting a baby, and she buys several home pregnancy tests to see if she is right. She's overjoyed when all the results are positive, but complications arise when Roy calls Doc Tuley for the results of a fertility test he took before leaving home. Roy is sterile, and therefore clearly not the father of Candy's child.

Darlene notices an uneasy glance between Lonnie Earl and Candy and realizes the two have been having an affair. Devastated, she treats herself to a complete and very expensive makeover and goes to see Tony Orlando perform, determined not to let her insensitive husband rob her of this dream as well. Meanwhile, Lonnie Earl is in the hotel lounge trying to make headway with Brenda, who unbeknownst to him is a high-class hooker. Eventually the two couples return to their suite, where they engage in loud arguments and fisticuffs. The following day they discover Darlene has found the ultimate way to avenge her husband's boorish treatment of her - she has donated the SUV he intended to sell when they returned home to be destroyed by an enormous, fire-breathing Robosaurus during the monster truck rally.

In an epilogue we learn Roy and Candy are the parents of three children, the results of the fertility test having been incorrect. Lonnie Earl and a confident Darlene are equal partners in his business, and she has become the star of the still-cheesey ads he continues to make.

Cast

Critical reception

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times rated the film 1½ stars, calling it "another one of those road comedies where Southern roots are supposed to make boring people seem colorful." He continued, "Well, they could be, if they had anything really at risk. But the movie is way too gentle to back them into a corner. They're nice people whose problems are all solved with sitcom dialogue, and the profoundly traditional screenplay makes sure that love and family triumph in the end." He thought although "the characters are pleasant" and "in some grudging way we are happy that they're happy," "nothing in Waking Up in Reno ever inspired me to think of its inhabitants as anything more than markers in a screenplay." [2]

Kevin Thomas of the Los Angeles Times observed, "The one thing that can be said of Waking Up in Reno is that it's rigorously consistent. Every note rings false, for writers Brent Briscoe and Mark Fauser have overlooked no stereotypes or clichés of small-town blue-collar speech, behavior or tastes. Because they have not drawn from life but from a zillion other contemporary middle Americana movies and TV shows, their characters are so many times removed from reality that it is hard to blame director Jordan Brady for relentlessly condescending to their characters and plot. (This picture is way too heavy-handed to pass for satire.)" [3]

Sean Axmaker of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer noted "the tepid script is neither satire nor farce, and the soap-opera twists are far too tame to spark the material. With the low-gear direction by Jordan Brady, you might think he has some heavy hauling to do, but the teary confessions and screechy screaming bouts are all sound and no fury . . . This half-baked production sat on Miramax's shelf for a couple of years. It's no more done now than then, merely more stale." [4]

Peter Travers of Rolling Stone said the film "offers big, fat, dumb laughs that may make you hate yourself for giving in. Ah, what the hell. The whole cast, directed by Jordan Brady with no restraint, is slumming . . . Thornton plays this low-ball farce with deceptive, masterful ease. Appreciate it." [5]

Todd McCarthy of Variety called the film "a hillbilly romantic comedy in which the hillbillies show up but the romance and comedy never do" and "a real what-were-they-thinking effort." He added, "Given the complete lack of urgency and inspiration in the material, [the] filmmakers have tried to give their work a semblance of life by all manner of desperate means - animated maps, jumpy editing, jokey narration and slumber-arresting musical cues, to little avail." [6]

Box office

The film opened in 197 theaters in the United States and Canada on October 25, 2002. On its opening weekend it grossed $108,930, an average of $552 per screen, and ranked #45 at the box office. It was pulled from release after four weeks. [1]

DVD release

Miramax Home Entertainment released the Region 1 DVD on April 8, 2003. The film is in anamorphic widescreen format with audio tracks in English and French. Bonus features include commentary by director Jordan Brady and screenwriters Brent Briscoe and Mark Fauser, deleted scenes with optional commentary, and The Making of Waking Up in Reno.

References

External links


 
 

 

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