Ruby in Paradise | |
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Theatrical release poster |
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Directed by | Victor Nuñez |
Produced by | Keith Crofford Sam Gowan (exec. prod.) |
Written by | Victor Nuñez |
Starring | Ashley Judd Todd Field |
Music by | Charles Engstrom |
Cinematography | Alex Vlacos |
Editing by | Victor Nuñez |
Distributed by | October Films |
Release date(s) | January 1993 (Sundance) October 1993 (USA) |
Running time | 115 min. |
Language | English |
Budget | $800,000 (estimated) |
Box office | $1,001,437 |
Ruby in Paradise is a 1993 film written, directed, and edited by Victor Nuñez, and starring Ashley Judd, Todd Field, Bentley Mitchum, Allison Dean, and Dorothy Lyman. It is an homage to Northanger Abbey by Jane Austen.[1]
Contents |
Judd plays Ruby, the title character and narrator of the film. As the film begins, she is leaving Tennessee, landing in Panama City, Florida, a summer resort town she visited as a child. Although she arrives there in fall, at the beginning of the off-season, she gets a job at Chambers Beach Emporium, a souvenir store run by Mrs. Chambers (played by Lyman), overcoming the owner's initial rejection of her employment application by telling her "I've done retail before, and I work real cheap." Over the course of a year she keeps a journal (from which the film's narration is taken) and contemplates her career ups and downs, her love life, her past, and her future.
The film is a character study, proceeding at a leisurely pace with Ruby's introspective comments interspersed with routine scenes at the souvenir store or conversations with her friend Rochelle (played by Dean), or the men she dates (played by Field and Mitchum).
Ruby in Paradise was filmed on location in Panama City, Florida.
The film received positive reception from mainstream critics. After the movie's theatrical run, the film was released on videocassette in 1994 by Republic and that same year in Canada by Cineplex Odeon. In 2008, Alliance Films released the movie on DVD in Canada.
Together with Public Access it won the 1993 Grand Jury Prize for Drama at the Sundance Film Festival. Roger Ebert picked it as one of his Top Ten Films for the year. It also won an Independent Spirit Award for Judd as Best Female Lead.
Awards | ||
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Preceded by In the Soup |
Sundance Grand Jury Prize: Dramatic 1993 tied with Public Access |
Succeeded by What Happened Was |