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Away We Go


Directed by: Sam Mendes
Starring: Maya Rudolph
Genre:
Romance/ Comedy/Independent
Run Time: 98 min.
Release Date: June
2009
On The Web:
Official
Site
Teaser:
Movie Trailer
Reviewed by
Byron Merritt |
When Burt (John Krasinski,
JARHEAD) and Verona (Maya Rudolph,
IDIOCRACY)
discover they’re pregnant, they take their unconventional lives on the
lam and try to find an appropriate place to raise their child.
As many of you probably know, it’s the journey, not the destination,
that often makes for the most enjoyable parts. Which separates this film
from other MEET THE FOCKERS-style movies where the protagonists find
love and laughs with family and friends at a specific location and not
necessarily on the journey.
Although there are other road trip movies out there (even old ones
like THE LONG, LONG TRAILER, and TRAINS, PLANES, AND AUTOMOBILES), this
film stands out for one very vital reason: it’s not about having a good
time or heavy laughs. It’s about growing up, growing old, and growing
out. That’s not to say there aren’t comedic moments. There are plenty!
Even from the get-go, you know you’re in for something different.
Burt and Verona aren’t married, and as they have an intimate encounter
(scene one), and Burt comments on Verona’s "different taste", we watch
her slap him when he even mentions the possibility of her being
pregnant.
Jump ahead six months and we find them discovering that becoming a
parent has many perilous decisions. Not the least of which is "Where to
raise our kid." The ensuing road trip finds them landing on family,
friends, and friends of their families’ doorsteps. They try to find
someplace that they feel comfortable, but every stop throws warning
flags in their faces. New-age hippies who reject their own names ("LN"
instead of Ellen). Parents who are so self-absorbed they don’t even
notice when they’re hurting their children’s feelings. Siblings who have
absolutely no filters and are completely nuts. Friends who can’t get
pregnant and hate themselves for it. And the list goes on.
Amidst all these damaged people is one who hits a nerve with Verona:
her sister Grace (Carmen Ojogo,
PERFUME), who brings up their parent’s
early demise. It is a raw point in Verona’s life that triggers memories
she’d rather suppress. But when she learns she can’t hide from the past,
and that it is inextricably interwoven with her future, a short trip
reveals the location where Verona and Burt always knew they’d end up
...they just didn’t know it ...for while.
The film is really an independent flick. At only $17 million dollars
to make, and produced by Big Beach Films (who also did
EVERYTHING IS
ILLUMINATED and
SUNSHINE CLEANING), the film had a limited release but
did exceptionally well (even getting five nominations at small award
shows). Part of the film’s success, no doubt, rests with the star appeal
(Jeff Daniels, Catherine O’Hara, Jim Gaffigan, Maggie Gyllenhaal and
Chris Messina, to name a few) and it’s amazing director, Sam Mendes
(AMERICAN BEAUTY) who doesn’t do many films, but the ones he does are
exceptional. And this one is no exception!
Rent it. Buy it. Just watch it!
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Image from Away We Go

DVD cost: $18.99
Purchase:
Tower.com (Blu-Ray)
Film Review Stew
Favorite? No.
Stew Poo-Poo? No.
Newsworthy:
The film is the first
studio production to adopt green filmmaking initiatives aimed to reduce
CO2 emission. Garbage was reduced by half, thanks to the various bins
for recyclable material. Caterers used ceramic and washed dishes as
opposed to throwaway products. Vehicles on the set used biodiesel fuel.
Movie Quote: "And
do you promise that if I die some embarrassing and boring death that
you're gonna tell our daughter that her father was killed by Russian
soldiers in this intense hand-to-hand combat in an attempt to save the
lives of 850 Chechnyan orphans?"
Other Actors/Actresses
from An Inconvenient Truth
  
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