IMDb RATING
6.7/10
3.7K
YOUR RATING
A woman and her daughter have been constantly moving from town to town for years, but their newest home might be different from all the others.A woman and her daughter have been constantly moving from town to town for years, but their newest home might be different from all the others.A woman and her daughter have been constantly moving from town to town for years, but their newest home might be different from all the others.
- Nominated for 1 Oscar
- 10 wins & 12 nominations total
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaJanet McTeer took the role as a labor of love. She has also mentioned she was hardly paid for her involvement.
- GoofsDespite references to "driving across country" from the East (West Virginia), all shots in the film are obviously from the area around Los Angeles.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Siskel & Ebert: Double Jeopardy/Jakob the Liar/Mumford (1999)
- SoundtracksPrivate Conversation
Written & Performed by Lyle Lovett
Featured review
British actress Janet McTeer gives a convincing, first-rate performance as a Southern woman and man-lover who can't find a good guy to love. She and her preteen daughter drive from one state to the next, lighting in a motel room somewhere until a local romance blooms--and then high-tailing out of town when it predictably blows up. Soon after arriving in Southern California, McTeer's Mary Jo Walker finds a decent job, begins making friends, and sees her daughter excelling in school for the first time; however, a new relationship with a sexy but volatile trucker may put everything on the rocks. What starts out as a generic road movie--with hints of "Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore" besides--becomes an absorbing, intimate character portrait. McTeer (who resembles Laurie Metcalf) isn't your typical tramp or "lover of life"; she isn't unstable, and she's a good mother, but what she's trying so hard to get (a husband and a real home) doesn't always respond to her in kind. We see Mary Jo trying her damnedest to make her life work, eventually falling into familiar patterns but this time learning from her mistakes. The finale is rose-colored and probably not credible, but the optimistic nature of Gavin O'Connor's screenplay (co-written with Angela Shelton), as well as his perceptive direction, makes the journey a fun, embraceable ride. **1/2 from ****
- moonspinner55
- Oct 8, 2011
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Details
Box office
- Budget
- $312,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $1,350,248
- Gross worldwide
- $1,350,248
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