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| Index | 172 reviews in total |
47 out of 55 people found the following review useful:
Outstanding, 16 January 2005
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Author:
stills-6 from california
From the initial scene of the ordeal of getting April up in the morning to the final shots, this was one of the most enjoyable movies I've seen in a long time. And it's enjoyable on many different levels -- it's funny, charming, weird, intelligent, and it has a real honest heart to it that isn't nearly sentimental or gushing. The psychological depth of this movie is astounding; and the characters, though there are many of them, are well realized. It is very clear that this film was made with a lot of care and compassion. With the possible exception of Wayne (overdone by a miscast Sean Hayes, reminiscent of the cringe-inducing Mickey Rooney in Breakfast at Tiffany's), you felt real emotion from every character. Katie Holmes is great as the disaffected daughter and Patricia Clarkson is just fantastic in a very complicated role. Well made and well acted. Highly recommended.
47 out of 55 people found the following review useful:
The best Thanksgiving movie ever, 3 April 2004
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Author:
zetes from Saint Paul, MN
Thanksgiving has always meant a lot to me. Unlike the stereotypical depiction of the holiday from movies, I always found it to be, beyond any other day of the year, the day when my family is the closest. Differences and resentments fade for a day, possibly because we're Midwesterners of German descent and there's nothing we like more than food. Whatever the reason, it's a pleasant holiday for me. Pieces of April captures the way I feel about Thanksgiving perfectly, and it moved me as deeply as any movie I can think of. It has a few flaws, a few things that could have been changed for the better, but its overall effect made me overjoyed and emotionally crushed at the same time. Patricia Clarkson was nominated for an Oscar for her performance as a mother of three dying of breast cancer. She's not a very nice person, and she's not too pleased with the way her life has come out. Katie Holmes plays April, Clarkson's eldest daughter. She lives in a crummy apartment in NYC and has invited her family to Thanksgiving dinner, most likely to be her mother's last. Unfortunately, Holmes finds that her oven doesn't work. She desperately searches the other apartments in her building for someone who isn't using their oven. A third track follows April's black boyfriend who rides his motorized scooter around the city for reasons that are at first obscure. It's a comedy, and a very, very funny one at that, but the themes of family and past injuries are remarkably touching. Clarkson is amazing, and she is the most obviously impressive performer in the film. However, Katie Holmes really proves herself to be one of the best actresses of her generation; her role is much more subtle and complex than Clarkson's. Oliver Platt plays April's father, and he also gives a subtle performance as the person trying to unite the family before his wife is gone. The only thing that really bothered me was the character of Wayne (played by Sean Hayes), one of the apartment dwellers whom April asks for help. He agrees to help her, but he thinks that she owes him something big, i.e., sex. That's surely believable, but the character is played as a goofy, eccentric cartoon character. It's far below the standard of the rest of the film. It reminds me a lot of Mickey Rooney's character in Breakfast at Tiffany's, an underthought splotch on what is otherwise a masterpiece. I wonder if it will have anywhere near as powerful an effect on others as it did on me (I wept for nearly a half an hour, and occasionally sobbed for almost an hour after that), but I am certainly more than willing to stick up for a movie like this that I really believe in. 10/10.
37 out of 43 people found the following review useful:
funny and moving little film, 11 April 2004
Author:
Roland E. Zwick (magneteach@aol.com) from United States
Written and directed by Peter Hedges, `Pieces of April' is a droll little
comedy with deadly serious overtones. April is the black sheep of the
Burns
family, the one child of whom her mother has no fond memories. Although
from what we see of her, April seems to be a pretty decent young lady, it
is
obvious that her parents and her brother and sister harbor deep
resentments
towards her (her earlier involvement with drugs and drug dealers seems to
be
the primary cause of bitterness). Well, it's Thanksgiving Day and April
is
attempting to mend some bridges by hosting this year's dinner at her
cramped
New York City apartment. April is terrified of failure and her family
members have little faith that she will be able to pull the event off.
Complicating matters even further is the fact that Joy, April's mother, is
suffering from terminal cancer.
As a narrative, the film basically runs along two parallel tracks. One
involves April and her frantic attempts to get her dinner cooked despite
the
fact that her gas oven has suddenly stopped working. This forces her to
go
up and down the hallway of her apartment building throwing herself on the
mercy of her colorfully eccentric neighbors, some of whom offer their
assistance and some of whom don't. Hedges mines his richest vein of humor
in this section, capturing the offbeat nature of both the people and the
situation. The other plotline - involving the family's reluctant trek
from
suburbia into the city - naturally carries with it far more serious
overtones, dealing as it does with death, recrimination, family
dysfunction
and despair. But even here, Hedges is able to inject some moments of
wicked
black humor into the proceedings.
Oddly enough, of all the characters, April is one of the least fully
developed in the film. She remains basically a passive observer and most
of
what we learn about her comes from comments made by various family
members.
We have to take it on faith that she is such a loser and a troublemaker
because we see very little evidence of it with out own eyes. Certainly
the
most intriguing character in the story is the ironically named Joy, ironic
because, even though her terminally ill status should elicit sympathy from
the audience, her often-nasty disposition makes it difficult for us to
like
her. This is Hedges' boldest touch, this refusal to sugarcoat or
sentimentalize a person just because life and the fates have been unkind
to
her. Also quite fascinating is the character of Beth, April's younger
sister. We see how Beth thrives on the positive attention she receives
simply by being the `good' daughter of the family, and how she jealously
and
ever-so-sweetly guards her own position while subtly sabotaging any effort
on the part of April to make amends and to find her way back into the
fold.
It's a fascinating portrayal of sibling rivalry carried to destructive
proportions.
`Pieces of April' features wonderful performances by Katie Holmes as
April,
Oliver Platt as her father, Alison Pill as her sister, and Derek Luke
(from
`Antwone Fisher') as her boyfriend. Particular praise should go to
Lillias
White, as the neighbor who supplies April with a stove at her greatest
hour
of need, and to Patricia Clarkson as Joy, who achieves the Herculean task
of
making her pain-wracked character both abrasive and sympathetic at the
same
time. It's an award-worthy performance.
31 out of 35 people found the following review useful:
Took Me By Surprise, 23 November 2005
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Author:
brocksilvey from United States
This film blew me out of the water. I was expecting an amiable, slight
comedy, serving more than anything else as a launching pad for Katie
Holmes's career into the Hollywood big time. But instead, this movie is
a substantive and very moving story about a young girl who desperately
wants to make a nice Thanksgiving dinner for a family from whom she
feels somewhat estranged. It's extremely warm but extremely sad, and
left me with a huge lump in my throat.
Katie Holmes is winning and sweet as April, and whether or not you like
Holmes, I bet you'll be rooting for her by the film's end. For one day,
her whole world becomes about planning one successful dinner party, and
her lack of skill forces her to fall back on the kindness of neighbors
she's never taken the time to meet. Meanwhile, her family (mother,
father, brother and snotty sister) are on their way into the city to
April's apartment, whining and complaining about having to visit a
crummy part of town and missing no opportunity to criticize April,
while trying to ignore the white elephant in the room, the fact that
their mom has cancer and may not live to see another holiday. Of
course, the conversations they have with each other communicate heaps
of back story and clue us in to the family dynamic, and we learn that
April's biggest critic, her mom, also happens to be the most like her
daughter.
Patricia Clarkson has become one of my favorite actresses, and her
Academy Award nomination for her performance as the mom in this film
was richly deserved (I think she should have won). She beautifully
plays this role with just the right amount of sarcasm and wit to
prevent the movie from ever getting bogged down in sentimentality. When
she finally is reunited with April at the very end, what could have
been an icky, maudlin ending instead knocked the wind out of me with
its simplicity and honest emotion.
"Pieces of April" just feels like one of those movies that is based on
actual events in the life of its writer or director. It's full of tiny
details of behavior that make the characters feel completely authentic,
rather than creations. And there's a total understanding on everybody's
part of the dynamics at play in a family that doesn't always get along
and of that tendency of families facing some sort of crisis to latch on
to one thing that's pretty mundane in order to avoid dealing with
something else that is too big for the individual family members to
deal with on its own.
Grade: A
29 out of 37 people found the following review useful:
I recommend the film for its true contribution to the American version of 'kitchen-sink' realism., 27 October 2003
Author:
John DeSando (jdesando@columbus.rr.com) from Columbus, Ohio
My family Thanksgiving dinner is latent with chaos, a breath away from
murder, on the edge of total misunderstanding. But we survive it and
return another year because we don't know any better, or amnesia sets
in, or these are the only people who will feast with us. Tim Hedges
catches my family and others I am sure in 'Pieces of April,' a comedy
in which Goth girl April and her black boyfriend invite her family from
Jersey to their Manhattan apartment for Thanksgiving dinner.
Mom, played by the current middle-age rage, Patricia Clarkson ('Station
Agent'), is dying from cancer, which allows her on the tumultuous ride
with hubby and two other children to indulge in sardonic observations
about her daughter's inability to do anything right, much less pull off
a dinner, to comments about her lovers, including long-suffering dad
(Oliver Platt), who patiently waits in horror for his wife to die.
Katie Holmes' April flies to almost every other apartment to find a
working stove, but what she finds is a menagerie of tenants, most of
whom like her don't know their way around a dinner, much less
Thanksgiving. As she figures out how to cut an onion or carry a turkey,
each one of us can remember the first time we learned those tricks,
often when the family could enjoy the humiliation.
The HD filming adds a home-movie touch to the proceedings, which are
all predictable because we have all been there. I recommend the film
for its true contribution to the American version of 'kitchen-sink'
realism and its evocation of thankfulness in all of us that our
Thanksgivings were never this disastrous, just by a hair though!
20 out of 24 people found the following review useful:
Very Delightful Thanksgiving Tale, 18 May 2005
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Author:
Claudio Carvalho from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
In a very poor zone of New York, April Burns (Katie Holmes) and her
boyfriend, the Afro-American Bobby (Derek Luke), are preparing to
receive April's family for a thanksgiving dinner. While Bobby tries to
borrow a suit for him, April realizes that her stove is broken and she
tries desperately to find a neighbor that can let her cook the turkey,
since she does not want to fail (again) with her family. Meanwhile, in
a suburb of Pennsylvania, her dysfunctional family is preparing to
travel to New York. While driving in the road, the relationship between
the Burns and the black-sheep April is disclosed through the
conversations between her father Jim (Oliver Platt), her resented
mother Joy (Patricia Clarkson), her brother, her sister and her
grandmother.
"Pieces of April" is an enjoyable and very delightful thanksgiving
tale. This low budget movie has a very simple story, being sometimes a
mean dramatic comedy of errors, but touching deep in the heart of the
viewer. The cast is very inspired, highlighting the performances of
Katie Holmes and Patricia Clarkson. The parallel way the story is
disclosed is magnificent, developing clearly each character, and
showing their feelings and resentments. I did not like the character of
April's neighbor Wayne (Sean Hayes), since it is not clear if he is a
weird or just a stupid man. "Pieces of April" is a gem to be discovered
by sensitive viewers. My vote is nine.
Title (Brazil): "Do Jeito Que Ela É" ("In the Way She Is")
22 out of 29 people found the following review useful:
Slightly Bizarre, and Very Sweet, 7 January 2005
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Author:
Darguz from Battle Creek, MI
"Once there was this one day where everybody seemed to know they needed
each other. This one day when they knew for certain that they couldn't
do it alone." (April, trying to explain the origins of Thanksgiving.)
That ultimately is what this movie is about -- people needing people,
and the inter-relationships of people. It's about April and her family,
but it's also about April and Bobby, the Lee family, Eugene and Evette,
and even Wayne, who needs somebody, but misses connecting once again.
Jim needs Joy, Bobby needs Latrell, Joy needs her family, she and Timmy
need the bikers, and it just goes on and on. We all need one another
and touch one another, and those touches spread out and out. Beautiful.
I also loved all the little twists, such as the stiff, middle-aged
mother chiding her teenage son about properly rolling a joint; and the
puncturing of stereotypes and prejudices. When Bobby's waiting by the
phone for Latrell, it's probably tempting to think he's doing a drug
deal or some other unsavory activity. But I knew better; I was laughing
well before it was revealed what they were up to. Magnificent.
Another one to add to the video library, and I'm going to have to check
out more Peter Hedges (though I have seen Gilbert Grape).
6 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
New Traditions Meet Old Over the Streets and Up the Stairs, 27 November 2003
Author:
noralee from Queens, NY
"Pieces of April" is a wonderful New York component for a trilogy of mordant
but ultimately sweet holiday movies, along with the Parisian "La Buche" and
the multi-ethnic L. A. "What's Cooking."
I particularly identified with Katie Holmes's character's incompetence at
cooking Thanksgiving dinner when the other women in the theater were
laughing uproariously at her efforts and I wasn't even sure what she was
doing wrong, other than focusing like I would do more on the decorations
than the food preparation.
Screenwriter and debut director Peter Hedges filmed in poorly lit digital
video on an evidently minuscule budget but with a terrific cast and mise en
scenes.
The characters who embark on parallel picaresque odysseys in a quaintly but
believably diverse Lower East Side tenement and suburbs to city road trip
are refreshingly individual and un-stereotyped in surprising directions,
even if the actors may overdo the theatrical flourishes. Sean Hayes
especially over-fusses his neighbor bit. Patricia Clarkson is marvelous as
a mother with daughter issues and cancer.
There was nary a dry eye in the house at the end.
15 out of 25 people found the following review useful:
I agree, best Thanksgiving movie ever, 13 March 2005
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Author:
Marian Paroo from Tel Aviv
I am so glad that I decided to plonk down a couple of dollars and see
this movie on Pay for Play the other night. I wasn't sure what to
expect, and I had one of the nicest movie surprises I had in a long
time.
April is a the black sheep of her family, but as Rita Mae Brown wrote
in one of her better novels to describe a character, has golden hooves.
She's gone off from the hills of, what is filmed anyway, in upstate New
York to lower Manhattan. But she's no That Girl. Her previous boyfriend
was a drug dealer, and her current fellow, gets his clothing at less
than wholesale prices.
She has a mixed bag dysfunctional family, the star of which is the kind
of little sister you wish you had sent out to play in traffic when you
had a chance, that she is trying to reconnect with. April is too good
for this bunch, as she tries to prepare the all American Thanksgiving
dinner in her own special way for this undeserving bunch.
It is so touching to see her, finally succeeding (maybe) in her quest
for a stove making favors, and decorating the stairway, all 4-5 floors
with autumn colored streamers, etc.
I just wanted to hug her!
5 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
A tale that somehow endears itself to the viewer, 17 November 2010
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Author:
MeloDee from Texas, U.S.A.
The premise of the movie is a simple one and basically summarizes the
whole movie, "A wayward daughter invites her dying mother and the rest
of her estranged family to her apartment for Thanksgiving dinner."
The movie starts us off on that Thanksgiving morning. First, we are
introduced to April, and her boyfriend Bobby who are living together in
a shanty apartment in New York, and then to April's mother, father, and
brothers and sisters in another location, who are preparing to make the
trip to visit her. We aren't provided with any back story, except what
we gather about the past from conversations that April's mother has
with the rest of the family during their voyage.
Honestly, I was finding myself slightly bored during the beginning of
the movie. The film, although over an hour, manages to span over just
one day, lending it a slow feel. The cinematography was somewhat
unimpressive. The soundtrack is sparse, with most scenes not having any
music at all, and the music that is present is humming just outside the
viewer's awareness most of the time rather than being the main focus in
any one scene.
I found myself easily able to make prejudgments about each of the main
characters based on their limited dialogues and their reactions to
things going on around them. I stereotyped Beth as the movie's prim and
proper "good younger daughter". She gave unsolicited advice with
surprising frequency, and always seemed to try to distinguish herself
as being the opposite of the "wild child" elder sister that she
obviously secretly envied, if not admired. Timmy played an easygoing
middle-child, cleverly juggling his role of responsibility as the one
only other "man of the house" with the conflicting role of unimportance
being in the middle tends to lend to a person. Bobby was the
soft-hearted but firm father. You could almost feel his tension when
you looked at him, empathize with his struggles to hold his family
together, knowing that he would someday have to do it all alone.
Finally, we come to April's mother, Joy. Whether Joy is an ironic name
for her or not, I will leave for you viewers to decide. She comes
across as jaded and sarcastic, with a sly sense of humor and a stubborn
streak. Most of all though, she seems tired, the toll from her illness
clear on her; the toll from her strained relationship with April,
clearer still.
Then of course, there's April herself. She's fierce, independent, and
loyal. It isn't hard to see why she could've gotten into trouble in the
past, but it also isn't difficult to see how she probably got out of
it.
This movie definitely has its funny moments, mostly stemming from the
encounters with the characters that Apirl meets as she struggles to
pull together her Thanksgiving dinner. Her family also has some
adventures during their trip, starting (almost) with picking up April's
partially senile grandmother from the nursing home.
Despite its simplicity- or maybe because of it- this film will tug at
your heartstrings in a way that you don't expect. At least, it
certainly did mine, partially because I could personally identify with
having a strained relationship with my own mother, even if it was just
for a time. I found myself close to tears during some moments, which is
rare.
I think the message of the movie is, that love has power, that family
is still family even when some of you don't fit in, some of you don't
like each other too much, and some of you try too hard to be perfect,
ultimately failing. Most fail, however, when they don't try at all. It
all sounds trite and very cliché, but this film somehow delivers itself
in a way that makes the message both memorable and believable. The cast
had to carry so much and each member carried his/her share with
significant grace.
Happy Thanksgiving to everybody- hopefully this movie will help you to
remember what the season is supposed to be about.
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