Michelle Williams does her best but she cannot prevent Kelly Reichardt's Wendy and Lucy, a weak tale about being broke and on the road in rural America, from dwindling into boredom.
Wendy and Lucy (2008)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:141
Fresh:119
Rotten:22
Average Rating:7.3/10
Consensus: Michelle Williams gives a heartbreaking performance in Wendy and Lucy, a timely portrait of loneliness and struggle.
Theatrical Release:Dec 10, 2008 Limited
Box Office: $700,720
Synopsis: On the heels of her critically lauded OLD JOY, Kelly Reichardt delivers another deeply resonant portrait of a dying America with WENDY AND LUCY. In OLD JOY, two men provided the heart and soul of... On the heels of her critically lauded OLD JOY, Kelly Reichardt delivers another deeply resonant portrait of a dying America with WENDY AND LUCY. In OLD JOY, two men provided the heart and soul of the story. This time, the film is centered on a young woman, played with utter conviction and selflessness by Michelle Williams (BROKEBACK MOUNTAIN). Williams is Wendy, a down-on-her-luck woman who has driven across-country with her dog, Lucy, in search of a better life in Alaska. Wendy can barely support this journey, and when her car breaks down in Oregon and she becomes separated from Lucy, her predicament becomes even more dire. In a world that doesn't seem to know she even exists, Wendy befriends a local security guard (Wally Dalton), who gives her a tiny fraction of hope. Considering this film together with OLD JOY, it's obvious that Reichardt has shot up in the ranks of American auteurs. She is becoming a master of minor features that feel like the best short stories, a sort of cinematic Raymond Carver. Credit is obviously bestowed upon the marvelous Williams, who is in almost every shot of the film, and who delivers an astonishingly honest performance. But everything about this film reeks of truth, most noticeably Sam Levy's restrained but beautiful cinematography, and Reichardt's patient editing. WENDY AND LUCY is a tribute to marginalized characters that the movies, and the real world, would usually rather ignore. [More]
Starring: Michelle Williams, Walter Dalton, Will Oldham, Larry Fessenden
Starring: Michelle Williams, Walter Dalton, Will Oldham, Larry Fessenden, John Robinson, Will Patton
Director: Kelly Reichardt
Director: Kelly Reichardt
Screenwriter: Kelly Reichardt, Jonathan Raymond
Producer: Neil Kopp, Anish Savjani, Larry Fessenden
Studio: Oscilloscope Pictures
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Reviews for Wendy and Lucy
Given the woeful lack of inner life for young women in American movies, Williams's single gesture of fatigue and partial defeat in Wendy and Lucy is momentous.
Older audiences are hailing this slim story of a hand-to-mouth transient limping her way to Alaska as an insight into Gen X's unmoored ennui. It's like they've watched The Kite Runner and now think they understand Afghanistan.
[With] very basic storytelling, we’ve got to be given a reason to care and it never happens.
Wendy and Lucy is quiet, deliberate filmmaking. See it knowing you will witness an idiosyncratic take on storytelling by a fundamentally independent filmmaker.
It's easy to admire to Williams' performance, without ever feeling compelled to cry.
Sensible people will see the film for what it is: Waiting for Dogot without Beckett... But you cannot argue with dog lovers: they see in a vacuum of nothingness an existential nirvana.
The classic indie-Sundance idiom of reticent performance, affectless dialogue, stonewashed colour photography and plain, sans-serif lettering on the credits.
Thanks to an extraordinary performance from Michelle Williams and an exceptionally deft hand from her director, this low-budget and loping little film is a genuine heartbreaker.
This is a low-budget movie with a limited release which deserves to be seen simply because it features one of America’s best actresses on fine form.
Wendy and Lucy takes place mainly outdoors and registers the natural beauty of the Pacific Northwest with unostentatious affection.
Williams's low-key, heartbreaking turn speaks volumes about the economic savagery of modern America, where even the companionship of a pet has a price beyond some people's means.
Wendy and Lucy is a short, sweet film with a premise as plain as they come: A girl and her dog drift into town.
Reichardt seems to be challenging us to ask ourselves questions that the occluded, stricken, mysterious Wendy can't or won't ask. Questions like: How did we get here? And what do we do now?
To her credit, Ms. Reichardt never allows her camera to become a voyeuristic witness to a young woman in distress. Instead, it remains focused on a largely indifferent American landscape of strangers in perpetual motion to nowhere.
Slow, ponderous, meticulously rendered realism that will appeal to specific audiences of slow, ponderous, meticulously rendered realism, with a heart.
Latest News for Wendy and Lucy
December 17, 2008:
Toronto Critics Love Wendy and Lucy ![]()
The Toronto Film Critics Association broke with the pack this week, awarding "Wendy and Lucy" Best Picture honors for '08. More...
December 15, 2008:
AFI Names 2008's Finest Films ![]()
The results are in, and the AFI has spoken: "The Dark Knight," "Iron Man," "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button," "Frost/Nixon," "Frozen River," "Gran Torino," "Milk," "WALL-E,"... More...
December 09, 2008:
Trailer & Poster review ![]()
More...
December 03, 2008:
Independent Spirit Award Nominations Announced ![]()
The Independent Spirits have announced their nominations for this year's awards. Frozen River, Rachel Getting Married, Ballast, Wendy And Lucy and The Wrestler are all up for... More...
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