Nola

2003 Comedy

Nola (Emmy Rossum) is a Kansas teen who runs away to New York City to escape an abusive stepfather. Once she gets to the big town, she sets about looking for a job and for her father, whom she's never met. She attacks both tasks with fierce determination, but has little success, until she stumbles upon a greasy spoon near Union Square where the eccentric owner, Gus (Sam Coppola), immediately takes a liking to her. Soon, she's waitressing at the diner and crashing in a room upstairs with the handsome fry cook, Ben (James Badge Dale), who also goes to law school when he feels like it. Nola spends her spare time using the phone book in an effort to track down the man she knows only as "Hutch." Things look up for Nola when she meets the sassy owner of the diner, Margaret (Mary McDonnell), who also runs a very classy escort service. Margaret sees something in Nola, and hires the girl as her assistant. As Nola's relationship with Ben gets more intimate, she tells him about her dream of being a successful songwriter. But things take an ugly turn when one of Margaret's escorts, a transsexual named Wendy (Michael Cavadias) offends a rich and powerful client, Niles (Thom Christopher). Niles is determined to have his revenge, and tries to use his media contacts to have an exposé written about Margaret's business. But the reporter assigned to the story, Leo (Steven Bauer), turns out to be an old friend of Margaret's. Nola, the feature debut of writer/director Alan Hruska, a former trial lawyer, had its world premiere at the 2003 Tribeca Film Festival. more..

Director: Alan Hruska

Starring: Emmy Rossum, Mary McDonnell, Steven Bauer, James Badge Dale, Thom Christopher

Reviews

  • One youngster -- even a youngster as talented as Rossum -- can't transform a mess of clichés into a little gem.

    Maitland McDonagh - TV Guide

    26 April 2013

  • A movie that pits a substantial actor like Mary McDonnell, playing a New York madam, against a bogus story that crossbreeds noirish affectations and romantic comedy into an unpalatable mush that suggests strawberry ice cream slathered with beer.

    Stephen Holden - The New York Times

    26 April 2013

  • Screwball it isn't, but it has screwy down pat.

    - Village Voice

    26 April 2013

  • The film is lousy with cartoonishly off-putting characters.

    Megan Lehmann - New York Post

    26 April 2013

  • Screwball elements feel overly theatrical -- one can almost see the actors waiting calmly in the wings for their breathless entrances.

    - Variety

    26 April 2013

Awards

No awards