If you're an admirer of [Mamet's] work, or if you're willing to be as patiently observant as Dale, you will find much that is fascinating and illuminating.
Lakeboat (2001)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:41
Fresh:34
Rotten:7
Average Rating:6.6/10
Consensus: Though not much happens plot-wise, Lakeboat still has a lot to offer for fans of Mamet.
Runtime: 1 hr 38 mins
Genre: Dramas
Synopsis: Veteran character actor Joe Mantegna makes his directorial debut with this big screen adaptation of David Mamet's semi-autobiographical play about a young man who learns some valuable life lessons... Veteran character actor Joe Mantegna makes his directorial debut with this big screen adaptation of David Mamet's semi-autobiographical play about a young man who learns some valuable life lessons aboard a ship one summer. Dale Katzman (Tony Mamet), an eager grad student in his early twenties, joins the crew aboard the Seaway Queen, a freight boat crossing Lake Michigan. Settling into his new world, he meets the crew: the bickering Skippy (Charles Durning), the storytelling Pierman (Peter Falk), the porn-loving Fireman (Denis Leary), the loudmouthed Stan (J.J. Johnston), and the sensitive Joe (Robert Forster). As the summer unfolds, Dale listens readily to the endless stories, arguments, and jokes that spew forth from the belligerent mouths of the lonely crewmembers. Eventually, Dale's honest, amiable presence cracks the hard surface of Joe, who shares a story that will remain with Dale forever. Mantegna, a Mamet regular, allows his actors to find the humanity in their characters, breathing life into the film's potentially stagey environment. The relentlessly crackling dialogue, both crude and hysterical, is pure Mamet, expressing repressed male behavior with an honesty (and vulgarity) that most writers dare not put down on the page. As the weathered Joe, Forster turns in another heartbreaking performance, which adds poignancy to the film's otherwise lighthearted tone. [More]
Starring: Charles Durning, Peter Falk, Robert Forster, Denis Leary
Starring: Charles Durning, Peter Falk, Robert Forster, Denis Leary, George Wendt, Andy Garcia
Director: Joe Mantegna
Director: Joe Mantegna
Screenwriter: David Mamet
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Reviews for Lakeboat
Where Mantegna succeeds is in providing a forum for some great acting.
A top-notch troupe of actors deliver the propulsive dialogue of David Mamet.
Lakeboat requires its audiences to embrace it as lovingly as Mamet and Mantegna embrace its men, but it's a lot to ask.
The magic is in the words, and there's always laughter, anger and sadness to be found in David Mamet's poetry of inarticulateness.
If you like David Mamet's men and their crazily profane arguments, you'll be happy you came.
Forster is the reason that even non-Mamet-heads might consider giving Lakeboat a shot.
Little more than a succession of acting exercises....But who cares when the dialogue is so meaty and the performances so canny?
As with any Mamet script, the cast is all, and these old boys take his macho monologues and make them sound like Homer.
More play than movie. But it's unusual for either. It's neither plot-driven like many plays nor action- and image-driven like most movies.
Despite some uneven moments, Lakeboat is brought to the screen with skill and sympathy.
Thanks to the likable, rough-hewn crew and Forster, the film flows along gruffly and with eloquence.
Not as sharp on characterizations as [Mamet's] later work, but it's essential viewing for admirers of his gutter-elegant dialogue.
The raw raunch and the latent yearning and pain [Mamet] sets down here with such assurance yield a movie of special rewards.
Movies about blue-collar workers are usually romanticized or artificial or ruined by slumming Hollywood stars, but Lakeboat is the real deal.
The script is so inherently stagy that setting the film on a real boat doesn’t pay off.
| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
|---|---|
| 78% 78% | The Hangover |
| 88% 88% | Inglourious Basterds |
| 66% 66% | Public Enemies |
| 24% 24% | G-Force |
| 44% 44% | Night at the Museum: B… |
| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
|---|---|
| 90% 90% | District 9 |
| 86% 86% | 500 Days of Summer |
| 63% 63% | Extract |
| 06% 06% | All About Steve |
| 78% 78% | It Might Get Loud |
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