Blue Car
Blue Car | |
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DVD cover | |
Directed by | Karen Moncrieff |
Produced by |
Peer J. Oppenheimer Amy Sommer David Waters |
Written by | Karen Moncrieff |
Starring |
David Strathairn Agnes Bruckner Margaret Colin Frances Fisher |
Music by | Adam Gorgoni |
Cinematography | Rob Sweeney |
Edited by | Toby Yates |
Distributed by | Miramax Films |
Release dates |
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Running time | 96 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $1,000,000 |
Blue Car is a 2002 drama film directed and written by Karen Moncrieff. It was her first film that she had directed and written.[1]
Plot
A gifted teenager named Megan living in the Dayton, Ohio area has been abandoned by her father and neglected by her mother, who works twelve-hour days and goes to school at night, leaving Megan to babysit her younger sister, Lily. The girls' father does not pay child support often, causing financial strain in the household.
Lily, has serious mental problems; she cuts herself, refuses to eat, and speaks about becoming an angel. After being checked into the psychiatric ward of a hospital, Lily kills herself by jumping out of an open window as she tries to "fly". Meg finds solace in her English teacher, Mr. Auster, who claims he is passionate about writing a novel. He becomes a comfort to Meg during her troubled times and encourages her to enter a poetry contest, which is later followed by one-on-one poetry tutoring.
After winning the local round of the competition, Megan wants to compete at the finals in Florida during spring break. With her mother unable and unwilling to fund the trip, Megan resorts to several incidences of theft and is barely able to make it to Florida.
A closer pseudo-sexual relationship develops between Megan and Mr. Auster. The two run into each other outside the hotel that is hosting the poetry competition and go to a hotel room where Meg reluctantly has sex with Mr. Auster, who stops after realizing that Megan is not comfortable at all with the situation. After this, Megan, looking through Mr. Auster's "novel", realizes that her teacher has not written a novel at all, and that it was all just a ruse to impress her. After writing and delivering a brand new poem attacking Mr. Auster's less-than-noble character, Meg walks out of the competition. Later, back home, she decides to live with her father, riding away with him in his blue car, still uncertain about her future.
Cast
- Agnes Bruckner as Megan Denning
- David Strathairn as Auster
- Margaret Colin as Diane
- Frances Fisher as Delia
- A. J. Buckley as Pat
- Regan Arnold as Lily
- Sarah Buehler as Georgia
- Dustin Sterling as Rob
- Mike Ward as Dad
- Wayne Armstrong as Don
DVD release
Blue Car was released on DVD on October 14, 2003 in the United States and Canada.
References
- ↑ Holden, Stephen (May 2, 2003). "Blue Car (2002) FILM REVIEW; Teacher and Prodigy, Along With Need and Lust". The New York Times.
External links
- Blue Car at the Internet Movie Database
- Blue Car at AllMovie
- Blue Car at Box Office Mojo
- Blue Car at Metacritic
- Blue Car at Rotten Tomatoes
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