728x90

Movie Review: A Home at the End of the World

From our provider: CommonSenseMedia
empty star empty star empty star empty star empty star Rate This Article
0 Comments
Common Sense Rating: PAUSE for ages 17+ Stars: 3 out of 5 (About Common Sense Ratings)
MPAA Rating: R  strong drug content, sexuality, nudity, language and a disturbing accident  MPAA Rating: Studio: Warner Bros.  Directed By: Michael  Mayer  Cast: Sissy Spacek, Colin Farrell, Robin Wright Penn  Running Time: 90 min  Release Date: 11/01/2004  Genre: Drama 

What Parents Should Know
The movie has extremely mature material. Characters drink, smoke cigarettes and marijuana, and take LSD, including a teenager who gives his young brother LSD and a mother who smokes marijuana with her son. A character is killed in an accident and other characters die offscreen. Characters use extremely strong language and there are explicit and graphic sexual references and situations, both heterosexual and homosexual. There are tense and sad scenes.

Families who see this movie could compare the families we are born into to the families we create for ourselves. Why does Bobby say that "we are all beautiful and lonely here?" People in this movie have a hard time knowing who they are. Claire says, "What if I'm not this unusual?" Jonathan offers to switch places in his family with Bobby. Claire tells Bobby that he doesn't look like himself and might be living someone else's life. What do they need to know to feel "like themselves?" How do we respond to a "big, beautiful, messy world?"

Common Sense Media Review
The Hours author Michael Cunningham has adapted his earlier novel for the screen and the result is admirable, respectable, but not completely successful. The book is the internal musings of the four main characters. What made it work was the beauty of Cunningham's language. It is touching and illuminating, and even poetic, but that does not make a movie.

What's left to put on film is the outlines of the story. Despite performances of great delicacy and insight it dissolves into soapiness without the lyrical and meditative prose to provide context and texture.

Bobby is a boy who loses his whole family. The older brother he adored is killed in an accident. His mother and father are so shattered that they become emotionally remote and both die before he graduates from high school.

Bobby meets Jonathan, the only child of Ned (Matt Frewer) and Alice (Sissy Spacek). They become close friends, sharing music, drugs, and some fumbling sexual encounters. Bobby is taken in by Jonathan's family after his father dies, and years later, after Jonathan has gone to college and stayed on in New York, Bobby (now played by Colin Farrell) is still living with Ned and Alice. When they move to Arizona, Bobby goes to New York to stay with Jonathan (Dallas Roberts) and his roommate, Claire (Robin Wright Penn).

Jonathan is gay. He and Claire have one of those hip, funky Manhattan, "Will and Grace", can't-live-without-him-but-can't-have-sex-with-him-even-though I'm-dying-to-have-a-baby, perfect friendships. Bobby is sweet, innocent, and open-hearted. Jonathan and Claire, who have none of those qualities, are surprised when he finds a way to fit in with them, possibly even to complete them. Claire seduces Bobby. Jonathan, who still loves Bobby, feels left out. When Claire becomes pregnant they decide to invent a new kind of family for themselves in a big old house in the country, a home at the end of the world.



Member Comments On...

Movie Review: A Home at the End of the World

Be the first person to add your comment.
300x250
300x250
Please log in ...
Close
You must be logged in to use this feature.

Thank You!

Thank you for helping us maintain a friendly, high quality community at Family.com. This comment will be reviewed by a community moderator.

Flag as Not Acceptable?

We review flagged content and enforce our Terms of Use, in which content must never be:

See full Terms of Use.