Bright Angel

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Bright Angel

DVD cover
Directed by Michael Fields
Produced by John Daly
Derek Gibson
Rbert K. MacLean
Paige Simpson
Written by Richard Ford
Starring Dermot Mulroney
Lili Taylor
Sam Shepard
Music by Christopher Young
Cinematography Elliot Davis
Editing by Clement Barclay
Melody London
Studio Hemdale Film Corporation
Distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Release dates November 1990 (Turin International Youth Festival)
14 June 1991 (USA)
Running time 93 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Box office $158,243 (USA)

Bright Angel is a 1990 film directed by Michael Fields. Although it received some critical acclaim, the film earned only $158,243 at the domestic box office.

Plot

George (Mulroney) is s a Montana teen whose sanity is deteriorating due to his parent's marital woes. He links up with Lucy (Taylor), a runaway headed for Wyoming with a dark background, who is trying to get her brother out of jail. George tries to help her, but finds himself crossing paths with people even more emotionally disturbed than his mother and father.

Principal cast

Actor Role
Dermot Mulroney George
Lili Taylor Lucy
Sam Shepard Jack
Valerie Perrine Aileen
Burt Young Art
Bill Pullman Bob
Benjamin Bratt Claude
Mary Kay Place Judy
Delroy Lindo Harley
Will Patton Woody

Critical reception

Roger Ebert of The Chicago Sun-Times enjoyed the film and gave it 3 1/2 stars:

There is a moment in every good movie when it becomes clear that the director knows what he is doing. In Michael Fields' Bright Angel, that moment comes when the son and the father come home, and find that the mother has been fooling around with another man... Movies like this (I am also reminded of Terence Malick's Badlands and Days of Heaven) depend so much on actors for the right tone, and Lili Taylor and Dermot Mulroney are perfectly matched to the material.[1]

However, reviews such as Kathleen Maher of The Austin Chronicle did not think highly of it, gave it 2 stars and had differing views of the acting:

Someone, it seems, has been watchin too many '70s road pictures and reading Jim Thompson novels way too late at night... Unfortunately, there's not much of a whole story here. It's an intricate collage without a frame. Taylor, a hypnotic screen presence visually is, otherwise, a pain in the ass with constant wisecracks delivered as if she's imitating Christian Slater imitating Jack Nicholson and adding a Canadian accent for good measure. She's been better in Mystic Pizza and in Say Anything.... Mulroney, on the other hand, may be just another pretty face, because he usually just stands around with his hands in his pockets. One thing for sure, all of these people are capable of better work, wait for it.[2]

Soundtrack

  • "Where Did God Go?" by Jody Alan Sweet
  • "Too Long Crying" by Jody Alan Sweet
  • "Cheshire" by Jody Alan Sweet
  • "Heal Somebody" by Sheryl Crow
  • "Hung Over Heart" by Jody Alan Sweet

References

  1. "Bright Angel :: rogerebert.com :: Reviews". Rogerebert.suntimes.com. Retrieved 2011-08-18. 
  2. "Bright Angel – Film Calendar". The Austin Chronicle. Retrieved 2011-08-18. 

External links

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