Release Date: 04/22/2008
Label/Distributor: Lionsgate
Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Retail Price: $27.98
Genre: Drama Cast: Frank Langella, Lauren Ambrose, Lili Taylor, Adrian Lester, Jessica Hecht
Director: Andrew Wagner
Running Time: 111
DVD Video Options: AC-3, Closed-captioned, Color
DVD Audio Options: English, Subtitled; Spanish, Subtitled; English, Original Language; Spanish, Dubbed
UPC Code: 031398228714
Battling illness and unable to finish a novel that has taken him ten years to write, aging novelist Leonard Schiller is slipping into literary obscurity. Formerly a famous author, Schiller has been all but forgotten by the readers, colleagues and critics who once praised him. But when Heather Wolfe, an ambitious graduate student, convinces Schiller that her thesis could reintroduce his writing to the world, the reclusive writer is forced to confront his past regrets. Frank Langella delivers a career-capping performance as a man who must redefine his work - and his perceptions - in the twilight of his life.
Starting Out in the Evening
By Mayna Bergmann -- Video Business, 3/10/2008
LIONSGATEStreet: April 22
Prebook: March 26
> A well-acted drama about a septuagenarian writer and a smitten grad student eager to re-spark his career.
Capturing the life of a writer on film is no easy task, but director Andrew Wagner, in his adaptation of Brian Morton’s novel, has managed to do it with intelligence. His protagonist, Leonard Schiller (played superbly by Frank Langella), pecks away at a typewriter in a quiet office in his New York apartment, hoping to finish a fifth novel. His routine is interrupted by Heather Wolfe (Lauren Ambrose), a brash young graduate student obsessed with Schiller’s brilliant, earlier work. Her hope is to write a dissertation, re-fueling his reputation—and perhaps getting closer to her literary idol in the process. At first, Schiller resists, then slowly succumbs, as the two talk literature and she slowly insinuates herself into his life. Meanwhile, Schiller’s fortysomething daughter Ariel (Lily Taylor) grapples with her own unhappiness and relationships. The result is a subtle, graceful and well-acted film about developing ideas and relationships.
Shelf Talk: Starting Out in the Evening received favorable reviews in many national publications and was nominated for a bunch of awards (including the Grand Jury award at the Sundance Film Festival and an acting nod for Langella at the Independent Spirit Awards), so it brings some cred to the new release shelf. Literary types and fans of the novel will be drawn to it naturally, but to reach a wider audience, it would be wise to play up these nominations as well as the recognizable cast.
Drama, color, PG-13 (mature themes, sexual situations, language), 111 min., DVD $27.98Extras: director’s commentary
Director: Andrew Wagner
First Run: L, Nov. 2007, <$1 mil.
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