Turning Paige. (Reviews).2002 112 m prod Chaos, At Shepherd Park Shepherd Park is a neighorhood in the northwest quadrant of Washington, D.C. in the United States. Borders The northern line of the neighborhood is defined by Eastern Ave, NW, which divides Shepherd Park from Silver Spring, Maryland. Productions, exp Carolyn McMaster, Colin Neale, p Carolyn McMaster, d Robert Cuffley, sc Robert Cuffley, Jason Long, ph Mark Dobrescu, ed Ken Berry This article is about the actor Ken Berry. For other uses see: Ken Berry (disambiguation). Kenneth Ronald "Ken" Berry (born November 3, 1933, in Moline, Illinois) is an American dancer, and comedic actor. , pd Paryse Normandeau, c Chris O'Neil Chris O'Neil is a name shared by several people, and may refer to:
Michael Shields (born 21 September, 1986 in Liverpool, England) is a football fan who gained notoriety when, on May 30, 2005, he nearly killed a Bulgarian Citizen with a paving slab in the Black Sea resort of Golden Sands, ; with Katherine Isabelle, Nicholas Campbell, Torri Higginson, Brendan Fletcher Brendan Fletcher (born on December 15, 1981 in Comox Valley, British Columbia) is a Canadian actor. He went to junior high school at Lake Trail in Courtenay, British Columbia. , Philip DeWilde, Nikki Barnett. Paige Fleming, a high-school student who dreams of becoming a writer, lives with her father in Moncton, New Brunswick New Brunswick, province, Canada New Brunswick, province (2001 pop. 729,498), 28,345 sq mi (73,433 sq km), including 519 sq mi (1,345 sq km) of water surface, E Canada. . Her mother committed suicide two years earlier. Now Paige looks after her father, Ross, as he tries to recover from alcohol addiction. Her older brother, Trevor, left the family shortly after mom's death; however, before he did, he got into a fist fight with Ross, who ended up in the hospital. One night, Trevor unexpectedly returns after a long absence and reawakens the memory of their dead mother. Paige, who fictionalizes her life in the plots of her stories, asks her English teacher for help with her writing, but feels betrayed when her teacher reveals more to her literary friends than Paige would have liked. Ross, whose grasp on his work-a-day life is tenuous at best, resumes drinking and loses his job. Trevor finds this out when Ross comes home while Trevor is searching through some of his mother's clothes in the basement. Ross drunkenly insists he put them back. When Trevor refuses, the two fight and Ross is hurt again. Paige blames Trevor and starts to drink herself. This leads to a drunken confrontation with her teacher. Later Paige comes home to find Trevor wrecking the living room with a golf club. He insists the family must come to terms with the mother's death and confront the turbulent past. For once paige agrees with him, and tells Ross she can't stay if he doesn't deal with it Ross refuse to do so. Calgary-based director Robert Cuffley chose his season well in setting Turning Paige near the end of winter. The snow, harsh skies and perennial foggy breath add to a feeling of being trapped, accentuating the characters inability to escape. The family is the crucible within which the characters must struggle to come to terms with their past and each other, and one couldn't ask for a bleaker confluence of circumstances than this family must endure. They are ravaged rav·age v. rav·aged, rav·ag·ing, rav·ages v.tr. 1. To bring heavy destruction on; devastate: A tornado ravaged the town. 2. by rage, denial and alcoholism. Mom was, before her suicide, a shut-I and alcoholic. Ross (Nicholas Campbell) has been in AA for almost a year. He has secretly begun drinking again, though he hides it from his children as long as he can. Before the end of the movie, Paige (Katherine Isabelle) starts drinking heavily herself. Cuffley focuses on the emotional triangle of Paige, Trevor (Philip DeWilde) and Ross, whose relationship is all but defined by a the mother's absence. Isabelle (from Ginger Snaps) gives a strong performance, gracefully navigating the intense emotional shifts between her relationship with her teacher (Torri Higginson) and her dysfunctional family dysfunctional family Psychology A family with multiple 'internal'–eg sibling rivalries, parent-child– conflicts, domestic violence, mental illness, single parenthood, or 'external'–eg alcohol or drug abuse, extramarital affairs, gambling, . Campbell (from DaVinci's Inquest), as the bumbling tortured father is exceptional, and proves once again he's an actor of hidden depths. Evocatively using misdirection MISDIRECTION, practice. An error made by a judge in charging the jury in a special case. 2. Such misdirection is either in relation to matters of law or matters of fact. 3.-1. and implication - mimicking the character's deliberate evavolatile family hiding from its troubled past. |
|
||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion