Next Stop Wonderland
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
Smart and beguiling, it manages the impressive feat of believing wholeheartedly in the power of love without checking its mind at the door.
Unlike the heavy-handed "Good Will Hunting," this gifted-Boston-misfit romance floats, adroitly mixing thoughtfulness, farce, and surprise.
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.
Both actors are so appealing, you root for the inevitable meeting to happen somewhere in the vicinity of Wonderland.
Anderson pulls it off, thanks in large part to his witty writing, punchy editing and a likable supporting cast.
Best Supporting Actor
Chlotrudis Awards (1999)
Brad Anderson
Deauville Film Festival (1998)
National Board of Review (1998)
Dramatic
Sundance Film Festival (1998)
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