Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Winter Solstice

 
Movies:

Winter Solstice

  • Director: Josh Sternfeld
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Family Drama
  • Themes: Starting Over, Fathers and Sons, Single Parents
  • Main Cast: Anthony LaPaglia, Aaron Stanford, Mark Webber, Allison Janney, Michelle Monaghan
  • Release Year: 2004
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 93 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

A family struggles to come to terms with changes after a death in the family in this independent drama. Jim Winters (Anthony LaPaglia) is a widower living in suburban New Jersey with his two teenage sons, Gabe (Aaron Stanford) and Pete (Mark Webber). Pete, the younger of the siblings, has a hearing problem that has made school difficult for him; consequently, he has lost interest in his education and spends most of his time goofing off. Gabe is smarter and more ambitious, and has a stable relationship with his girlfriend, Stacey (Michelle Monaghan), but is beginning to chafe at the limitations of small-town life. And five years after his wife's death, Jim still hasn't been able to pick up and start his life over again. When Gabe announces he's decided to move to Florida, it has differing effects on those around him -- Stacey, hurt and confused, begins to withdraw; Pete strikes up a friendship with one of his teachers (Ron Livingston); and Jim struggles to work up the nerve to talk to his new neighbor, Molly Ripkin (Allison Janney. Winter Solstice was the first feature film from writer and director Josh Sternfeld; it won enthusiastic notices following its screenings at the 2004 Tribeca Film Festival. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Cast

Brendan Sexton III - Robbie; Ron Livingston - Mr. Bricker; Ebon Moss-Bachrach - Steve

Credit

Amanda Slater - Associate Producer, Amanda Koblin - Casting, Amanda Harding - Casting, George Paaswell - Co-producer, Paola Weintraub - Costume Designer, Amanda Slater - First Assistant Director, Josh Sternfeld - Director, Plummy Tucker - Editor, Anthony LaPaglia - Executive Producer, Jodi Peikoff - Executive Producer, John Leventhal - Composer (Music Score), Doug Bernheim - Musical Direction/Supervision, Jody Asnes - Production Designer, Harlan Bosmajian - Cinematographer, John Limotte - Producer, Doug Bernheim - Producer, Lisa Kent - Set Designer, Brian Miksis - Sound/Sound Designer, Josh Sternfeld - Screenwriter

Similar Movies

Men Don't Leave; Mac; A Cool, Dry Place; Tully; Inheritance
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Winter Solstice (film)
Top
Winter Solstice

Promotional poster
Directed by Josh Sternfeld
Produced by Doug Bernheim
John Limotte
Written by Josh Sternfeld
Starring Anthony LaPaglia
Aaron Stanford
Mark Webber
Music by John Leventhal
Cinematography Harlan Bosmajian
Editing by Plummy Tucker
Distributed by Paramount Classics
Release date(s) April 8, 2005
Running time 89 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Gross revenue $337,617 (Worldwide) [1]

Winter Solstice is a 2005 American drama film written and directed by Josh Sternfeld. The screenplay focuses on the efforts of a man to interact with and relate to his sons in the years following the accidental death of his wife.

Contents

Plot

New Jersey landscape gardener Jim Winters is struggling to raise his sons, high school students Gabe and Peter, as a single father. Gabe announces he is leaving home to move to Tampa, Florida, although he's vague about both his reason for doing so and what he plans to do there once he arrives. Instead of discussing his plans with his devoted girlfriend Stacey, he plans to drop her but, aware of what he has in mind, she quietly retreats from him in order to make it difficult for him to achieve his goal. Peter, who was in the car with his mother when she was killed in an accident five years earlier, is a rebellious, hearing-impaired underachiever doing poorly in school, despite the efforts of his teacher Mr. Bricker, who urges him to work harder in order to meet his potential.

Jim helps new neighbor Molly Ripkin move some cartons and she asks him and his sons to dinner. Her invitation proves to be the catalyst that upsets the delicate equilibrium they have been maintaining in their lives as each tries to deal with his loss and painful memories in his own way.

Production

The film was shot on location in Glen Ridge, Jersey City and Oradell, New Jersey.

The soundtrack includes "The Rookie Year" by Brandtson and "Sunset Soon Forgotten" by Iron & Wine.

The film premiered at the 2004 Santa Barbara International Film Festival and was shown at the 2004 Tribeca Film Festival and the 2004 Vancouver International Film Festival before going into limited release in the United States on April 8, 2005. It opened on five screens and grossed $20,393 on its opening weekend. At its widest release in the US it played in only 39 theaters. It was featured at the Cannes Film Market and the Rio de Janeiro International Film Festival following its US release. Eventually it earned $319,355 in the US and $18,262 in foreign markets for a total worldwide box office of $337,617. [1]

Cast

Critical reception

Dana Stevens of the New York Times called the film "the kind of ambling, event-free family drama that will either draw audiences in with its gentle, understated power or quietly bore them out of their skulls." [2]

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times observed, "The movie is not plot-driven, for which we must be thankful, because to force their feelings into a plot would be a form of cruelty. The whole point is that these lives have no plot. The characters and their situation are on stage and waiting for something to happen, but Josh Sternfeld, the writer-director, isn't going to let them off that easily. If this movie ended in hugs, it would be an abomination . . . Sternfeld . . . knows he will have more effect on us if he denies us closure." [3]

Mick LaSalle of the San Francisco Chronicle called the film "a completely boring, counterfeit movie" and added, "Because everyone in Winter Solstice is miserable, because everyone is sensitive, because nothing happens, because people smile through tears and tear through smiles, and because there isn't a single explosion or car chase, there will be people who'll insist that this film is a searing examination of the human soul. In fact, it's dreadful, but it's a special kind of dreadful - the kind designed to appeal to intelligent people on principle . . . The film's depiction of middle-aged grief is antiseptic and uninformed, and its depiction of middle-aged bonding is trite and unreal." [4]

David Rooney of Variety called the film an "accomplished debut for writer-director Josh Sternfeld . . . distinguished by its emotional integrity, sustained mood of aching melancholy and superbly understated performances." He added, "Relatively little happens in Sternfeld's screenplay, the rewards of which lie in its intelligent refusal to offer artificial, clean solutions or to broadcast the characters' conflicts in big, showy scenes. Instead, the writer-director coaxes out their fear, bitterness, hostility and sorrow through small revelations or telling silences." [5]

Awards and nominations

Anthony LaPaglia was nominated for the Australian Film Institute Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role but lost to Shane Jacobson in Kenny.

DVD release

The Region 1 DVD was released on September 13, 2005. The film is in anamorphic widescreen format with an audiotrack and subtitles in English.

References

External links


Shopping: Winter Solstice
Top
 
 

 

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 "Winter Solstice (film)" Read more