A Prairie Home Companion (film)

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A Prairie Home Companion
Directed by Robert Altman
Produced by Wren Arthur
Robert Altman
Written by Garrison Keillor
Starring Garrison Keillor
Meryl Streep
Lily Tomlin
Lindsay Lohan
Kevin Kline
Woody Harrelson
John C. Reilly
Virginia Madsen
Tommy Lee Jones
Maya Rudolph
Cinematography Edward Lachman
Editing by Jacob Craycroft
Distributed by Picturehouse
Release date(s) United States June 9, 2006
Country US
Language English
IMDb profile

A Prairie Home Companion (previously known as The Last Broadcast) is a 2006 ensemble comedy film elegy directed by Robert Altman, his final film released just five months before his death. It is based on A Prairie Home Companion, a program broadcast on public radio stations in the United States and elsewhere. The film is a fictional representation of behind-the-scenes activities on a long-running radio show that has unexpectedly been cancelled.

Contents

[edit] Cast

It stars the show's creator, Garrison Keillor, who wrote the screenplay and plays himself. It also features:

It should be noted that six of the stars (Garrison Keillor, Kevin Kline, Lily Tomlin, John C. Reilly, Virginia Madsen, and Woody Harrelson) as well as all the other members of the cast of the film (except Sue Scott and Lindsay Lohan) are midwesterners.

[edit] Production notes

Principal photography for the film began on June 29, 2005 at the Fitzgerald Theater in Saint Paul, Minnesota (the usual venue for the radio show). Filming ended on July 28, 2005.

Because the Fitzgerald is a rather small building, other stage theaters in the Minneapolis-St. Paul region had been considered as stand-ins. With some effort, the necessary film equipment was crammed into the structure. The basement was also used for sets due to lack of space. Set design also had to make the show more visually interesting, and fake dressing rooms were used in the film (the movie's production designer noted that Keillor's actual dressing room is "about the size of a very, very small bathroom"). Mickey's Diner, a landmark of downtown St. Paul, is also featured.

[edit] Critical response

The general reaction to the film by critics has been favorable, as it has garnered an 80% "fresh" rating at Rotten Tomatoes, a site that tallies prominent reviews. Roger Ebert awarded the film four out of four stars, saying, "What a lovely film this is, so gentle and whimsical, so simple and profound."[1]

It has had its detractors, however. The controversial film critic Michael Medved gave the film one and a half stars (out of four) saying, "The entertainment value stands somewhere between thin and non-existent" and, "[it may be] the worst movie ever made that pooled the talents of four (count ‘em - four!) Oscar winners"[2]

Desson Thomson from The Washington Post came between the two, saying that while the movie had its strengths, it was weaker than it should have been, in a review headlined "Honey, You Could Ask For More" (a reference to the opening theme song of the radio show and film)[3].

[edit] Box office

The film had a successful limited release in the States and grossed $20,252,121.

[edit] DVD release

The DVD of A Prairie Home Companion was released October 10, 2006.

[edit] Trivia

  • Altman was parodied on the radio program a few weeks before filming started in a Guy Noir skit on the June 4, 2005 edition of the show, recorded in Los Angeles. In it, he was portrayed as directing a film entitled People Standing Around Talking and Using Hand Gestures.
  • Tom Waits and Lyle Lovett were originally slated to play Dusty and Lefty.
  • On July 23, 2005, The New York Times reported[4] that to receive insurance for the shoot, 80-year-old Robert Altman had to hire Paul Thomas Anderson as a "backup" director to observe filming at all times and be prepared to take over for Altman in case of his incapacitation.[5][6].
  • APHC is the second major picture to be filmed in Minnesota in 2005. Northern parts of the state were abuzz a few months earlier when North Country, starring Charlize Theron and Woody Harrelson, was filmed there. Few movies had been made in Minnesota in recent years, leading many to believe that the Minnesota Film and TV Board — intended to promote the state as a filming destination — had disbanded. It still exists, though the board is "restructuring" as of July 2005.
  • On November 1, 2005, the Star Tribune reported that an early screening in New York City for film distributors resulted in a heavy bidding war. Picturehouse bought the rights, and company President Bob Berney, "aiming to capitalize on the name recognition of the 31-year-old radio program, recommended that the title revert to A Prairie Home Companion. 'At the screening, Garrison (Keillor, the radio show's host and writer) said that to broaden the film's appeal, they were thinking about changing the name to Savage Love, so we may have an argument there,' Berney said."
  • APHC was the opening movie for the 2006 South by Southwest film festival on March 10.
  • Dusty and Lefty are also characters on the show. As with Noir, they act like their radio conterparts.
  • The film premiered in St. Paul, Minnesota on a briskly cold May 3, 2006 at the Fitzgerald Theater, which had projection and sound equipment specially brought in for that purpose. The film's stars arrived in ten horse-drawn carriages. Brian Williams of the NBC Nightly News anchored his newscast from neighboring Minneapolis that night so that he would be able to attend.
  • Asphodel is a flower. It is referenced in the poem Demeter And Persephone by Alfred Lord Tennyson.
  • While comparisons to Altman's Nashville are easy to make, A Prairie Home Companion features a striking reference to an earlier Altman film: Virginia Madsen plays a role that is remarkably similar in dress and behavior to the angelic woman in Brewster McCloud played by Sally Kellerman.
  • The film is very similar in structure to Radioland Murders which has more slap stick humor.
  • Lola has "4-5-94" stenciled on her jeans, likely a reference to the day Kurt Cobain is believed to have died.
  • The call letters of the radio station where the show aired, WLT ("With Lettuce and Tomatoes"), were used previously by Keillor in his novel WLT: A Radio Romance, and the station's owners, the Soderbergh brothers, are referred to in the dialogue.
  • This was Robert Altman's last film.

[edit] References

  1. ^ [1]
  2. ^ [2]
  3. ^ [3]
  4. ^ [4]
  5. ^ [5]
  6. ^ [6]

[edit] External links


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