A Home at the End of the World

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A Home at the End of the World
Directed by Michael Mayer
Produced by John Hart (producer)
Written by Michael Cunningham
Starring Colin Farrell,
Robin Wright Penn,
Dallas Roberts,
Sissy Spacek
Distributed by Warner Independent Pictures
Release date(s) 23 July 2004 (USA)
Running time 97 min
Language English
Budget ~ US$6,500,000
IMDb profile

A Home at the End of the World is a book by Pulitzer Prize-winning author Michael Cunningham, who also wrote the screenplay of the movie (directed by Michael Mayer).

The book is narrated in the first person, with the narrator changing in each chapter. Bobby and Jonathon are the main narrators, but several chapters are narrated by Alice (Jonathan's mother) and Clare.


[edit] Plot

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

Bobby had grown up in a home in suburban Cleveland where partying and drugs were a recurring theme. He had already witnessed his beloved older brother's death in a home accident and his mother's death by the time he befriends Jonathan, who comes from a sheltered, but loving family. After Bobby finds his father dead, Jonathan's family takes him in.

Bobby and Jonathan become best friends. Closer than brothers, they also experiment sexually. The two eventually lose touch, but meet up again in their twenties in 1980s New York, where Bobby (played by Colin Farrell) moves in with Jonathan (Dallas Roberts) and his eccentric roommate Clare (Robin Wright Penn). Clare had planned to have a baby with Jonathan (now openly gay), but Bobby and Clare become lovers, while Jonathan still has feelings for Bobby. Clare and Bobby, had a baby named Rebecca and moved to a country home (together with Jonathan) where they build their family.

The trio form their own unusual family, questioning traditional definitions of family and love, while dealing with the complications of their love triangle. Erich, a former sexual partner of Jonathan's, joins the household when he becomes ill with AIDS, although this subplot is absent from the film version. In the movie Erik Smith plays Bobby as a teenager, and Harris Allan plays the teenage Jonathan.

[edit] External links

In other languages