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Lakeboat (2001)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:4
Fresh:2
Rotten:2
Average Rating:6.2/10
Consensus: Though not much happens plot-wise, Lakeboat still has a lot to offer for fans of Mamet.
Runtime: 1 hr 38 mins
Genre: Dramas
Synopsis: Veteran character actor Joe Mantegna makes his directorial debut with this big screen adaptation of David Mamet's semi-autobiographical play about a young man who learns some valuable life lessons... Veteran character actor Joe Mantegna makes his directorial debut with this big screen adaptation of David Mamet's semi-autobiographical play about a young man who learns some valuable life lessons aboard a ship one summer. Dale Katzman (Tony Mamet), an eager grad student in his early twenties, joins the crew aboard the Seaway Queen, a freight boat crossing Lake Michigan. Settling into his new world, he meets the crew: the bickering Skippy (Charles Durning), the storytelling Pierman (Peter Falk), the porn-loving Fireman (Denis Leary), the loudmouthed Stan (J.J. Johnston), and the sensitive Joe (Robert Forster). As the summer unfolds, Dale listens readily to the endless stories, arguments, and jokes that spew forth from the belligerent mouths of the lonely crewmembers. Eventually, Dale's honest, amiable presence cracks the hard surface of Joe, who shares a story that will remain with Dale forever. Mantegna, a Mamet regular, allows his actors to find the humanity in their characters, breathing life into the film's potentially stagey environment. The relentlessly crackling dialogue, both crude and hysterical, is pure Mamet, expressing repressed male behavior with an honesty (and vulgarity) that most writers dare not put down on the page. As the weathered Joe, Forster turns in another heartbreaking performance, which adds poignancy to the film's otherwise lighthearted tone. [More]
Starring: Charles Durning, Peter Falk, Robert Forster, Denis Leary
Starring: Charles Durning, Peter Falk, Robert Forster, Denis Leary, George Wendt, Andy Garcia
Director: Joe Mantegna
Director: Joe Mantegna
Screenwriter: David Mamet
Reviews for Lakeboat
Based on Mamet's experience as a freighter on the Great Lakes while a grad English lit student, Mantegna's screen version is so dramatically inert and artistically shapeless resulting in an uninvolving memory film.
Lakeboat requires its audiences to embrace it as lovingly as Mamet and Mantegna embrace its men, but it's a lot to ask.
I once taught a class on Mamet's films. I wish I could have opened it with this one, because for Mamet, it all starts here.
The film's chief pleasure, a considerable one, is in hearing Mr. Mamet's characteristic idiom ... so close to its real-world source.
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