Main specs
Actor(s): Amy Adams, Embeth Davidtz, Benjamin McKenzie, Alessandro Nivola, Celia Weston, Scott Wilson, Frank Hoyt Taylor
Director(s): Phil Morrison
Genre: Comedy
Classification: 15 years and over
Production Year: 2005
Running Time: 1 hour 46 minutes
Consumer Advice: Contains Strong Language And Sex
Video Category: Feature Film
Plot: A sophisticated Chicago woman meets her husband's family for the first time as she travels to rural North Carolina to meet an outsider artist. When she does, she finds herself in a world totally different from her own, and sees a new side of her husband.
Release details
DVD Region: Region 2 (Europe)
Studio(s): EUREKA ENTERTAINMENT; ARVATO SERVICES
Release date: 21/08/2006
No of Discs: 2
Catalogue No: EKA 40219
Barcode: 5060000402193
Performer: Yo La Tengo
Executive Producer: Mike Ryan
Director of Photography: Peter Donahue
Producer: Mike Ryan, Mindy Goldberg
Writer: Angus MacLachlan
Languages
Main Language: English
Technical information
Special Features: Commentary By Amy Adams and Emeth Davidtz,, Amy Adams Interview and Q & A Session In London,, Ten Deleted Scenes,, Five Behind The Scenes Documentaries,, Original Casting Sessions - Amy Adams and Ben McKenzie,, Ann Wood Art Gallery
Award information
OSCAR: Best Actress In A Supporting Role 2005 (Amy Adams)
|
DVD Description
A successful Chicago woman travels to rural North Carolina to meet an artist and meets her husband’s family for the first time. When she does, she finds herself in a world totally different from her own, and sees a new side of her husband. Cosmopolitan Chicago couple Madeleine (Embeth Davidtz) and George (Alessandro Nivola) meet at a fancy art auction where she is working as a dealer, and they are married six months later. Madeleine is recruiting an outsider artist, and she travels to rural North Carolina to meet him. George accompanies her--as he is originally from Pfafftown--and though it has been three years since he visited home, Madeleine insists on meeting his family. When she does, she finds herself in a world totally different from her own, and sees a new side of her husband. His mother Peg (Celia Weston) and father Eugene (Scott Wilson) are quiet homebodies who aren't sure what to make of Madeleine's sophisticated career and lilting British accent. George's deadbeat brother Johnny (Ben McKenzie) never finished high school and lives at home with his young wife Ashley (Amy Adams), who is naive and bubbly--and very pregnant. While the family's simplicity, traditional values, and religion make them suspicious of Madeleine, Ashley is the one bright-eyed spirit who is happy to have Madeleine as a sister-in-law and celebrates her marriage to George. Giving an art-film aesthetic to a touching family drama, director Phil Morrison and screenwriter Angus MacLachlan first feature film JUNEBUG was shot in their hometown of Winston-Salem, North Carolina. The film is set in nearby Pfafftown and Pilot Mountain, and the location is itself a character in the film as long sequences of soundless photography show rows of houses, or rooms in a house, or stretches of farmland--capturing the essence of this area of the American South. JUNEBUG is an effecting film that sheds light both on the always-surprising nature of in-laws and the unique culture of the South.
|