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January 29, 2021

Emily Blunt and Jamie Dornan in WILD MOUNTAIN THYME Available on DVD February 2nd.

John Patrick Shanley, who created the classic, Moonstruck, brings his sweeping romantic vision to Ireland with WILD MOUNTAIN THYME. The headstrong farmer Rosemary Muldoon (Emily Blunt) has her heart set on winning her neighbor Anthony Reilly’s love. The problem is Anthony (Jamie Dornan) seems to have inherited a family curse, and remains oblivious to his beautiful admirer. Stung by his father Tony Reilly’s (Christopher Walken) plans to sell the family farm to his American nephew (Jon Hamm), Anthony is jolted into pursuing his dreams in this comedic, moving and wildly romantic tale.

With the purchase of WILD MOUNTAIN THYME on disc or digital, fans are eligible to earn points towards special rewards via the Universal All-Access Rewards program. Members can redeem their points for digital movies, signed collectables, box sets, win exclusive prizes and more! For FREE registration and details please visit www.MyUniversalRewards.com.   

WILD MOUNTAIN THYME will be available on DVD and Digital February 2nd

WILD MOUNTAIN THYME stars Emily Blunt, Jamie Dornan, Jon Hamm, Dearbhla Malloy and Christopher Walken

December 11, 2020

WILD MOUNTAIN THYME – Review

Somewhere in the long list of what we can’t do during the last holidays of 2020 is spending that week or so break traveling and exploring. Perhaps the best option is vacationing virtually via our local cinema (or streaming service). How about heading to the “old country”? No, it’s not that old country, the setting of this holiday. Instead think about the holiday just a few months away: St. Patrick’s Day. This weekend’s new release is an ode to the “Emerald Isle”, although its time frame allows more rain than snow to cover those verdant green fields. It’s setting isn’t Christmas time, but rather WILD MOUNTAIN THYME.

At its beginning, we actually go back in time to the earlier days of neighboring farm families the Reillys and the Muldoons. Patriarch Tony (Christopher Walken) Reilly’s pride and joy is his only son, ten-year-old Anthony. Ah, but the lad is also adored by little Rosemary Muldoon, despite the efforts of her older sister Fiona. The story springs ahead to the present as the all-grown-up Anthony (Jamie Dornan) now pretty much runs the farm for widowed papa Tony. Things are now complicated by two gates that separate the Reilly farm from a thin segment now owned by the Muldoons. Papa Muldoon has just passed, but neither his widow Aoife (Dearbhla Molloy) nor the also adult Rosemary (Emily Blunt) is interested in selling. But she’s still interested in him, though Anthony never acts on the mutual attraction, now that Fiona moved away started her own family. And after Aoife’s passing, Rosemary now runs that farm. Her demise prompts Tony to make a momentous decision: since Anthony won’t “settle down”, he’ll offer to sell it to his brother living in the states, whose son Adam (Jon Hamm) is actually interested in purchasing the prime property. In fact, Adam is so interested in becoming a “gentleman farmer” that he travels there for a “look-see”. And he likes what he sees in the lovely Rosemary. Yes, it’s a classic romantic triangle. Will the American “interloper” finally spur the eternally hesitant Anthony into action or will the “yank” eventually merge the two farms?

The international cast does their best to “jump-start” this fractured fable. The always interesting Blunt is able to bring a sense of reality to the “passion prize” Rosemary. In her eyes we see a bit of her frustration over the “cards she’s been dealt” and an unrequited passion, not only for Anthony but for experiencing the world that her dusty ole’ records have only hinted about. Blunt does most of the dramatic “heavy lifting” in the amorous encounters with the somewhat dim Anthony. Dornan seems happy to step out of the shadows (and shackles) of Mr. Grey but has to summon all his skills to make the always distracted farmer someone that we can “root” for. It doesn’t help that the role is overwhelmed in the domestic discussions by the charming but miscast Walken, whose accent is right out of a regional dinner theatre production of “Finian’s Rainbow”. He seems to be a “special guest star” in a Dublin-based TV sitcom. The same could be said of Hamm, though mercifully spared a brogue, who is the usual abrasive, arrogant ugly American that’s so popular in many such foreign flicks and TV shows. For most of his scenes, Hamm leans hard on a bemused but often confused reaction to the eccentric townsfolk. It’s hard to accept that his Adam would want to do a whole “Green Acres” life change.

Lauded playwright John Patrick Shanley directs this adaptation of his stage work, which doesn’t have that “let’s open this up for cinema” look as many theatre-based films. Maybe the original venue softened the air of forced whimsy that pervades the take. This seems to be intended for folks who thought that THE QUIET MAN was a brutal, realistic “slice of life”.  So much of this is cringe-worthy “cutesy-ness” passing for wit (Blunt retains her dignity even as she must perform “Swan Lake” moves on a gravel driveway). There’s the beginning of a “spark” between Adam and Rosemary, but zero chemistry with her longtime intended. Then Anthony’s big reveal of the secret that pushed him away from her is indulgently ridiculous. Yes, the flora and fauna are spectacular, but enduring this tripe feels like being bopped on your noggin by the “blarney stone” after a meal of rancid corned beef. After 100 or so minutes of this drivel, the final scene has a big singing curtain call with the deceased characters smiling from a prime pub table (that’s because they weren’t watching or streaming this). WILD MOUNTAIN THYME is far from “time” well spent. I’d rather douse a bowl of Lucky Charms with Guinness.

1 Out of 4

WILD MOUNTAIN THYME screens exclusively in the St. Louis area at Landmark’s Plaza Frontenac and in select theatres everywhere. It’s also available as a video on demand via multiple streaming apps and platforms.

October 12, 2020

First Look: Emily Blunt, Jamie Dornan, Jon Hamm, And Christopher Walken Star In WILD MOUNTAIN THYME

Filed under: Movies — Tags: , , , , , — Michelle McCue @ 10:47 am

Emily Blunt (L) stars as Rosemary and Jamie Dornan (R) stars as Anthony in John Patrick Shanley’s WILD MOUNTAIN THYME, a Bleecker Street release

John Patrick Shanley, who created the classic MOONSTRUCK, brings his sweeping romantic vision to Ireland with WILD MOUNTAIN THYME. The headstrong farmer Rosemary Muldoon (Emily Blunt) has her heart set on winning her neighbor Anthony Reilly’s love. The problem is Anthony (Jamie Dornan) seems to have inherited a family curse, and remains oblivious to his beautiful admirer. Stung by his father Tony’s (Christopher Walken) plans to sell the family farm to his American nephew (Jon Hamm), Anthony is jolted into pursuing his dreams in this comedic, moving and wildly romantic tale.

Bleecker Street will release WILD MOUNTAIN THYME in theaters and on demand on December 11th

Photos Credit: Kerry Brown / Bleecker Street

December 12, 2008

Review: ‘Doubt’

Filed under: Drama,Review — Tags: , , , — Movie Geeks @ 8:15 am

Jeremy:

With ‘Doubt’, two powerhouse actors collide in an engaging battle between what we believe and what we want to believe. There is a difference, and writer/director John Patrick Shanley, who adapted the story from his stage play, moves us back and forth between these two emotions with skillful filmmaking.

Meryl Streep plays Sister Aolysius Beauvier, an aged nun who finds very little enjoyment life and fault with everything and everyone in it. Philip Seymour Hoffman plays Father Brendan Flynn, a gentle priest who Sister Beauvier believes may have formed an inappropriate relationship with an African-American boy. Amy Adams plays Sister James, the main person torn between these two sides. It is her who first notices Father Flynn’s potential actions towards the boy, and it is through her that we see most of the action.

In essence, we are Sister James, an observer in the world of these two forces. On one hand, we find a hatred within ourselves for one force, though we realize early on that it is hardly ever in the wrong. On the other hand, we have this other force that is kind and gentle, but we are uncertain of its intentions. The first is telling us the second is doing something wrong, but how can the compassion we feel coming off of it be wrong?

‘Doubt’ raises many hard-hitting questions, and it never really gives us any clear-cut answers. The dialogue dances around the issues never honing in and directly addressing what is being said. Sometimes this brand of dialogue works very well. Certain scenes between the three leads are lyrical in the dialogue and the way the actors are performing. One of Father Flynn’s sermons where he creates a parable that confronts the nature of gossip is particularly brilliant.

Other times this dancing around the issue doesn’t work so well. There are times in the film where what is truly being said is hard to read and reading between the lines becomes more and more painstaking.

In one scene, Sister Beauvier is conversing with the boy’s mother. The mother reveals something about the boy’s home life, and, for a few seconds, the conversation stops. Sister Beauvier slowly asks, “What are you telling me?† It’s the only time in the film where someone stops and asks for clarification on what is being said. Most of the time, we are left to fend for ourselves.

However, even in these moments where we are uncertain what the film is telling us, we are subject to three incredible performances. Streep is magnificent as always, and she’s given a pretty thankless role. Most veterans of her craft wouldn’t be able to generate the amount of charisma she is attains with this part. Hoffman, on the other hand, is given a more empathetic part. As Father Flynn, he exudes a level of benevolence and it’s difficult to see him as a potential villain in the story. Adams gives just the right amount of quirk to make her likeable, yet we understand her willingness to go along with whatever Sister Beauvier has planned.

All three give exceptional performances in their individual roles, yet the one scene where all three come together teeters frighteningly close to becoming hammy. It is Hoffman’s sincerity in his part that keeps this scene grounded in some kind of reality. Without the subtle earnestness he displays, the whole film could have easily toppled over into ridiculousness.

‘Doubt’ is an unyielding examination of right and wrong, certainty and reservation, that is told with tightly wound dialogue from beginning to†¦well, almost the end. There are many turns the story takes throughout the film, but there is one, final twist that practically deflates everything we’ve seen beforehand. One character reveals something about themselves, and if it was supposed to answer any more questions about them or the actions they take, it didn’t work. Without this final scene, the story works, and it works very well. With it, we are left without any wind in our sales. Any conversation after the film will, unfortunately, be monopolized by that final revelation and not the importance of what happens before it. The way the story ends may have worked better in its original format, but the disconnection that is created from it being film hinders the ending

The ending aside, ‘Doubt’ is a very well-crafted story that makes for a first-rate film. I haven’t even mentioned the impeccable camera work by Roger Deakins (‘No Country for Old Men’, ‘The Assassination of Jesse James†¦Ã¢â‚¬â„¢), who is becoming a staple in the business of cinematography. The questions raised by ‘Doubt’ linger in your mind well after the film is over. Even though there are certain distractions with the film, there is enough to praise it as a top-notch film.

[Overall: 3.5 stars out of 5]

Travis:

‘Doubt’ is one of these films that is adapted from it’s original source material written for the stage by it’s original author. John Patrick Shanley wrote the play on which this film is based and then adapted it into a screenplay and directed the movie. This is possibly the reason for which the film fails at the end.

The last movie experience I had like this was with ‘The Shape of Things’ (2003) written and directed by Neil LaBute, who also wrote the original stage play. I loved the play when I read it, but felt the movie didn’t properly convey the source material… at least, by my interpretation. Now, I haven’t read or seen ‘Doubt’ as a play, but I am curious having seen the movie.

Meryl Streep plays a hard-nosed traditional Catholic school nun/principal whom all the students fear. She’s bitter and cold and relentless. There is virtually nothing in this character, as portrayed, to offer any human empathy towards. There are two brief moments in which she shows her humanity, one while being questioned by the priest, played by Philip Seymour Hoffman, and the other after being caught by a parent listening to a transistor radio she confiscated from a student.

Streep did a fine job, but I question whether this performance is really worthy of an Oscar. She’s given far better performances and there are far better performances from 2008 that are more deserving. With that said, Philip Seymour Hoffman was incredible as the priest who Streep is determined to expose and/or ruin, depending on what your individual interpretation of the film becomes. [We’ll talk more about this in a second.] Hoffman has garnered support for this performance as a strong supporting actor candidate for the Oscar. He is at once peaceful, kind and comfortable while at times uncertain, anxious and fearful.

‘Doubt’ is the perfect title for this film as the story is all about the doubts surrounding the characters, but also implies the doubt that the audience experiences as the story unfolds. The priest is accused of having committed a terrible act against a minor, but we are never certain of what has happened, who is right or wrong, or of who is lying or truthful. The film is structured around this idea of doubt, but the problem engages itself at the end, which is abrupt and unsatisfying. I felt cheated, especially after enduring a decent film up to this point that had captured my attention and held me prisoner in it’s assumed ordeal.

[Overall: 3 stars out of 5]

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