A Walk to Remember (film)

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A Walk to Remember


IMDb 3.5/5 stars 6.7/10 (12,473 votes)
Directed by Adam Shankman
Written by Nicholas Sparks (novel)
Karen Janszen (screenplay)
Starring Mandy Moore,
Shane West,
Peter Coyote,
Distributed by Warner Brothers
Release date(s) January 25, 2002
Running time 101 min.
Language English
IMDb profile

A Walk to Remember is a 2002 film set in mid-1990s Beaufort, North Carolina, based on the eponymous 1998 novel by Nicholas Sparks. The movie stars pop singer Mandy Moore and Once and Again actor Shane West. The movie was directed by Adam Shankman and produced by Denise DiNovi and Hunt Lowry.

Contents

[edit] Plot

Tagline: Love is like the wind. You cannot see it but you can always feel it.

The movie revolves around the lives of two very different Beaufort High School teenagers: the daughter of a minister, Jamie Sullivan (Mandy Moore) and a jaded, aimless high school senior, Landon Carter (Shane West).

When a prank on a fellow high-school student goes wrong, Landon is punished with mandatory participation in various after-school activities, such as tutoring to younger disadvantaged children at their sister school and acting in the drama club's final production, the spring play. At these functions he is forced to interact with Jamie Sullivan, but does not befriend her immediately. When Landon realizes that he needs help learning his lines for the production, he asks Jamie to assist him. She agrees to help him if he promises not to fall in love with her, to which he responds by saying, "That's not a problem." At school, however, Landon continues to look down upon Jamie and even mock her along with his closest colleagues.

Eventually, Landon is intrigued by Jamie's positive attitude, forgiving nature, and overwhelming faith. He is actually glad he caused the prank, because it brought him to her. Landon falls in love with Jamie even though she had previously told him not to. The two begin dating, which threatens Landon's reputation and friendships with other students. He defends Jamie on various occasions and decides to end his connections with his previous clique, he even goes so far as to violently attack a former friend for publically humiliating her.

Jamie finally tells Landon that she has terminal leukemia and has stopped responding to treatments. As Jamie is hospitalized, Landon fulfills various wishes on Jamie's "Before I Die" list, such as build her a telescope so she can see a comet. Through this process, Landon and Jamie learn more about nature and love. The movie ends with Jamie's death, but only after the couple are married in the same chapel as was Jamie's deceased mother, the event that topped Jamie's wish list. Landon himself becomes a better person through Jamie's memory, achieving the goals that he set out to do, like she did.

Some time later Landon visits Jamie's grave. He tells her that he is sorry he could not complete all of Jamie's wishes as he couldn't show her "the miracle" she wanted to see before dying. Her father then says, "She did - it was you."

[edit] Cast

[edit] Reception

The film was generally met with negative reviews by critics, though some praised Moore for her "quietly convincing" acting performance"[1]. Even though not a critical success, it was a modest box-office hit, earning $41 million in the United States alone, and is also widely known and beloved among teenagers.

Year Ceremony Category Result
2002 MTV Movie Awards Breakthrough Female Performance won
2002 Teen Choice Awards Film - Choice Breakout Performance, Actress won
2002 Teen Choice Awards Film - Choice Chemistry (Moore/West) won
2002 Teen Choice Awards Film - Choice Actress, Drama/Action Adventure

Academy awards|nominated

Mandy Moore beat out fellow teen pop singer Britney Spears (for her performance in Crossroads) in two Teen Choice Awards and one MTV Movie Awards. Spears and Moore were also nominated for another Teen Choice Awards, though both failed to win.

[edit] Soundtrack

The movie's soundtrack features five songs by Mandy Moore and others by CCM/alternative acts New Radicals, Switchfoot, Rachel Lampa and more. The lead song "Cry" was originally released on Moore's sophomore studio album Mandy Moore.

[edit] External links

In other languages