Thanks to newfangled things like TV and the Internet, small-town folks aren't as uniformly insulated as director Phil Morrison and screenwriter Angus McLachlan would have us believe.
Junebug (2005)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:123
Fresh:106
Rotten:17
Average Rating:7.5/10
Consensus: Aided and abetted by a wonderful cast, director Phil Morrison transforms familiar material into an understated and resonant comedy.
Theatrical Release:14-04-2006
Synopsis: Giving an art-film aesthetic to a touching family drama, director Phil Morrison and screenwriter Angus MacLachlan present their first feature, which was shot in their hometown of Winston-Salem,... Giving an art-film aesthetic to a touching family drama, director Phil Morrison and screenwriter Angus MacLachlan present their first feature, which was shot in their hometown of Winston-Salem, North Carolina. The film is set in nearby Pfafftown and Pilot Mountain, and location is itself a character in the film as long sequences of soundless photography show rows of houses, or rooms in a house, or stretches of farmland--capturing the essence of this area of the South. Successful, cosmopolitan, and adorable Chicago couple Madeleine (Embeth Davidtz) and George (Alessandro Nivola) meet at a fancy art auction where she is working as a dealer, and they are married six months later. Madeleine is recruiting an outsider artist, and she travels to rural North Carolina to meet him. George accompanies her, as he is originally from Pfafftown, and though it has been three years since he visited home, Madeleine insists on meeting his family. When she does, she finds herself in a world totally different from her own, and sees a new side of her husband. His mother Peg (Celia Weston) and father Eugene (Scott Wilson) are quiet homebodies who aren't sure what to make of Madeleine's sophisticated career and lilting British accent. George's deadbeat brother Johnny (Ben McKenzie) never finished high school, and lives at home with his young wife Ashley (Amy Adams), who is naive and bubbly--and very pregnant. While the family's simplicity, traditional values, and religion make them suspicious of Madeleine, Ashley is the one bright-eyed spirit who is happy to have Madeleine as a sister-in-law and celebrates her marriage to George. JUNEBUG is an effecting film that sheds light both on the always-surprising nature of in-laws, and the unique culture of the South. [More]
Starring: Amy Adams, Embeth Davidtz, Benjamin McKenzie, Alessandro Nivola
Starring: Amy Adams, Embeth Davidtz, Benjamin McKenzie, Alessandro Nivola, Celia Weston, Scott Wilson, Frank Hoyt Taylor
Director: Phil Morrison
Director: Phil Morrison
Screenwriter: Angus MacLachlan
Producer: Mike Ryan
Composer: Yo La Tengo
Studio: Sony Pictures Classics
Reviews for Junebug
The richly suggestive Junebug gives us plenty to mull as it takes us into an environment where secrets are harbored and character can stagnate like summer air that has all but given up waiting for a breeze.
Junebug has a big, wide-open heart and a sense of wonder about how complicated and surprising people are.
In the end, we not only believe in the men and women populating the film, but feel along with them. By offering that experience, Junebug has done its job.
Director Phil Morrison and screenwriter Angus MacLachlan, both from North Carolina, give us characters that ring true and a worthy portrait of the chasm between city and country.
Junebug immerses itself in a part of the American experience Hollywood doesn't touch anymore, and has sharp, perceptive talents behind camera.
As refreshing as a tall glass of iced tea with mint on a hot summer's day, Junebug is one of the year's most beguiling films.
Junebug is a textbook case of filmmakers who can't make up their minds about their characters; it's a failure of nerve disguised as dramatic ambiguity.
Thankfully MacLachlan and Morrison don't take the easy way out by making fun of the country folk, or by "humanizing" the city folk and converting them to country ways.
The stereotypical outsider look into fundamentalist southern Christian world is a bit too clichéd but the small, capable cast makes the best out of it.
Composed of small moments that, in their questioning, touch on something illuminating about the human heart and its mysterious adaptability.
It's hugely entertaining, it's spectacularly acted, and it pricks you in all kinds of places.
Adams is so pure-hearted and touching that she redeems the film, just as her character redeems, or tries to, the blighted lives around her.
All the acting is so good, and the setting is so rightly observed, that Junebug emerges as one of the best pictures of the year.
Junebug is a great film because it is a true film. It humbles other films that claim to be about family secrets and eccentricities.
Latest News for Junebug
February 06, 2008:
Amy Adams Spending A Night at the Museum with Ben Stiller
Critics have loved Amy Adams since her Junebug days, but now that she's charmed audiences on a larger scale with Enchanted, she's finding herself in demand for more high-profile... More...
May 16, 2006:
"Underdog" Woos the "Junebug" Gal
Amy Adams, the doe-eyed doll who dazzled literally everyone with her "Junebug" performance, has signed on to play the female lead in Universal's live-action... More...
May 03, 2006:
Ebertfest 2006: Festival Ends "Bad"-ly
Saturday at Roger Ebert's Overlooked Film Festival -- the last full day of screenings -- was a day that challenged the audience's sense of ethics and empathy. More...
March 06, 2006:
Indie Spirit Awards Distributed
Lost in the shadow of the weekend's Oscar coverage was the annual Independent Spirit Awards presentation, which is where you'll find ... a lot of accolades similar to the... More...
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