Next Stop Wonderland

1998 Comedy

An independent romantic comedy, Next Stop, Wonderland (1998) made headlines at the Sundance Film Festival when it became the object of a bidding war, ultimately won by Miramax Pictures to the tune of $6 million. Hope Davis stars as Erin Castleton, a night-shift nurse who's cruelly dumped by her boyfriend Sean (Philip Seymour Hoffman), a political activist. When her mother Piper (Holland Taylor) places a wildly inaccurate personals ad in the local paper, Erin is at first enraged, but then becomes curious. After she dates a variety of men who are all wrong for her, she meets Andre (Jose Zuniga), a handsome Brazilian music expert who invites her to Sao Paulo. Although Erin likes Andre, her Mr. Right is actually Alan Monteiro (Alan Gelfant), a plumber she's never met, though the two keep crossing paths. Trying to break out of his working class existence, Alan is studying marine biology but is indebted to a local mob boss, who wants him to kidnap a star blowfish from the local aquarium. Actress Taylor, the real-life aunt of co-writer, editor and director Brad Anderson, also appeared in his next film, Happy Accidents (1999). more..

Director: Brad Anderson

Starring: Hope Davis, Alan Gelfant,Philip Seymour Hoffman, Callie Thorne, Holland Taylor

Reviews

  • Smart and beguiling, it manages the impressive feat of believing wholeheartedly in the power of love without checking its mind at the door.

    Kenneth Turan - Los Angeles Times

    26 April 2013

  • Unlike the heavy-handed "Good Will Hunting," this gifted-Boston-misfit romance floats, adroitly mixing thoughtfulness, farce, and surprise.

    - The New Yorker

    26 April 2013

  • Anderson brings compassion to his amused sense of yuppie tragicomedy, as he does to his nuanced understanding of Boston, the setting of this appealing fairy tale.

    Lisa Schwarzbaum - Entertainment Weekly

    26 April 2013

  • Both actors are so appealing, you root for the inevitable meeting to happen somewhere in the vicinity of Wonderland.

    Ruthe Stein - The San Francisco Chronicle

    26 April 2013

  • Anderson pulls it off, thanks in large part to his witty writing, punchy editing and a likable supporting cast.

    Ken Fox - TV Guide

    26 April 2013

Awards

  • Best Supporting Actor

    Chlotrudis Awards (1999)

     
  • Brad Anderson

    Deauville Film Festival (1998)

  • National Board of Review (1998)

  • Dramatic

    Sundance Film Festival (1998)