Lindberg demonstrates a remarkable sense of place, a keen understanding that emotions are boiled into a concentrate, not diluted, in the rural setting.
Rain (2002)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:57
Fresh:48
Rotten:9
Average Rating:7/10
Theatrical Release:Apr 26, 2002 Limited
Box Office: $283,615
Synopsis: The debut film by director Christine Jeffs, RAIN, records with charm the confusion of coming of age amidst domestic disintegration. In Far North New Zealand in 1972, Janey (Alicia... The debut film by director Christine Jeffs, RAIN, records with charm the confusion of coming of age amidst domestic disintegration. In Far North New Zealand in 1972, Janey (Alicia Fulford-Wierzbicki) has traveled to the beach for a long lazy summer with her family. As the days get longer, Janey teaches her little brother, Jim (Aaron Murphy), to swim while their Scotch-sedated parents ignore each other, wallowing in their messy marriage. From hungover days to beach party nights, they fake their way through parenting. It is late into one such night, while party music plays loudly, that Janey's mother, Kate (Sarah Peirse), lulls photographer Cady (Marton Csokas) into a swirling secret embrace. Though Janey detests the drunken dramatics, her mother's boozing and flirting symbolize the freedoms of adulthood, so Janey steals sips and smokes, and kisses the neighbor kid. But he's just a boy, and Janey's becoming a woman, so she sets her sights instead on her mother's pick, Cady. As the title suggests, the oceanic climate of New Zealand leads to dramatic changes of weather, and also reflect RAIN's mid-film change of heart. RAIN first sparkles like the bright blue sea and warm summer nights in the glow of fairy lights, then crumbles under bruised bourbon-colored skies. With a superb musical score, the Split Enz' Neil Finn band provides retro-styled melancholia indebted to the Brothers Gibb. [More]
Starring: Alicia Fulford-Wierzbicki, Aaron Murphy, Sarah Peirse, Marton Csokas
Starring: Alicia Fulford-Wierzbicki, Aaron Murphy, Sarah Peirse, Marton Csokas, Alistair Browning
Director: Christine Jeffs
Director: Christine Jeffs
Screenwriter: Christine Jeffs
Producer: Philippa Campbell
Composer: Neil Finn, Edmund McWilliams
Studio: IDP Distribution
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Reviews for Rain
Though the story ... is hackneyed, the characters have a freshness and modesty that transcends their predicament.
Director Christine Jeffs' visual palette is hauntingly poetical, her spare use of dialogue a relentless composite of the film's constrictive atmosphere.
Fulford-Wierzbicki ... deftly captures the wise-beyond-her-years teen.
The overall result is an intelligent, realistic portrayal of testing boundaries.
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| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
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| 32% 32% | Terminator Salvation |
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