Pleasantville (film)


Pleasantville

Pleasantville theatrical poster
Directed by Gary Ross
Produced by Steven Soderbergh,
Gary Ross,
Jon Kilik
Bob Degus
Written by Gary Ross
Starring Tobey Maguire
Reese Witherspoon
Marley Shelton
William H. Macy
Joan Allen
Jeff Daniels
Paul Walker
J. T. Walsh
Don Knotts
Jane Kaczmarek
Music by Randy Newman
Editing by William Goldenberg
Distributed by New Line Cinema
Release date(s) 17 September 1998
Running time 124 minutes
Language English
Budget ~ US$40,000,000
Gross revenue $49,805,462
IMDb Allmovie

Pleasantville is an Academy Award-nominated 1998 film written, produced, and directed by Gary Ross. Released by New Line Cinema in Canada on September 17, and stars Tobey Maguire, Reese Witherspoon, Marley Shelton, William H. Macy, Joan Allen, and Jeff Daniels. Don Knotts, Paul Walker, Jane Kaczmarek and J. T. Walsh are also featured. The film is rated PG-13 for some thematic elements emphasizing sexuality and language.

This was J.T. Walsh's last film, released after his death. The film was released in the United States on October 23, 1998.

Contents

Plot



Although David (Tobey Maguire) and his sister Jennifer (Reese Witherspoon) are twins, they lead dramatically different high school social lives. Jennifer focuses mainly on her appearance and popularity, while David spends much of his spare time on the couch watching reruns of Pleasantville, a black-and-white '50s sitcom similar to Leave It To Beaver and Father Knows Best.

Breaking the TV remote during an argument, a strange TV man shows up. He hands David a special remote with only a few buttons that teleports them into the world of Pleasantville. When they are pulled into the show they are expected to assume the characters of Bud and Mary Sue Parker. They now live in the black and white world that lacks knowledge and craves similarity and conformity. Jennifer, reluctant at first, wants to go back to the real world. When she finds out that Skip (Paul Walker), the captain of the basketball team, is in love with her, all that changes.

At school, David walks into the basketball practice. The team is perfect and so is David. Even when he kicks the ball off to the side, it bounces off the walls and ceiling before making a perfect basket. However, after he tells Skip it may not be the right time to go out with Mary Sue (to keep Jennifer from changing the plot), Skip shoots and misses. The coach and the rest of the team stay away from the "cursed" ball.

In geography class, the students learn about the geography of Main Street. Jennifer asks what is outside of Pleasantville and the teacher declares it an absurd question. Jennifer persists to ask what is at the end of Main Street and the teacher replies that the end is the beginning (all the roads are circles).

After school, David shows up late to his job at the corner diner with Mr. Johnson. Mr. Johnson is at first unsure of how to proceed when Bud (David) doesn't show up, so he keeps wiping the counter until there is a hole in it. David tells Mr. Johnson that he can set out the napkins and take over when Bud (David) doesn't show up.

When Jennifer deviates from the plot and invites Skip to Lover's Lane, David takes off and tries to stop her. He fails and goes home depressed. Mr. Johnson later confronts him about closing and tells David that he did it all on his own. He goes on to tell David that he enjoyed the change. He connects this to painting the shop window at Christmas and tells David that he looks forward to it all year because Christmas is the time when he can do things differently. He realizes the absurdity of looking forward to something all year and starts to change.

Meanwhile, Jennifer exposes Skip to sex at Lover's Lane. The next day at school, Skip tells the rest of the team about sex and after that change, no one can make a perfect basket. The team goes on to lose their next game, shocking the community, having never lost a game previously.

When Mary Sue's mother, Betty Parker, asks Mary Sue (Jennifer) what happens at Lover's Lane, Jennifer tells her about sex. Mrs. Parker is confused and asks what sex is. Jennifer explains sex to Mrs. Parker and is told that George Parker, Betty's husband, would never do that. Jennifer offers an alternative and Mrs. Parker goes upstairs and masturbates in the bath tub. It is at this time that Mrs. Parker starts seeing color. Mr. Parker is disturbed that Betty did not go to bed at the usual time, but he brushes it off.

Also at this time, a tree outside bursts into flames with the new knowledge. David recognizes the fire and rushes to get the firemen. The firemen are confused by this fire until David gives one a hose and instructs him how to use it. The fireman says that he always wondered what the hose was for.

The next day at the corner store, David is confronted about how he knew how to put out the fire. He explains about elsewhere and someone asks about the Mississippi and Huckleberry Finn. David explains the story and the book from the library, previously blank, fills in. He proceeds to explain more books (such as The Catcher in the Rye) and soon citizens are rushing to the library to read.

Bud brings a book for Mr. Johnson about the history of art, and Mr. Johnson appears fascinated. Later that day, things escalate when Mrs. Parker is now colorful and Mr. Johnson draws her. In addition Jennifer becomes fascinated with a book, and David goes to Lover's Lane with Margaret Henderson (Marley Shelton). With all the new ideas, a rain storm with thunder and lightning start.

Mr. Parker comes home and Mrs. Parker is not home to greet him. He wanders through the house saying his classic phrase "Honey, I'm home." It soon turns to "Where's my dinner?" He rushes off to the bowling alley where things haven't changed and everyone bowls a strike every time. The mayor learns of the change and is shocked. One of his friends reveals his shirt with a burn mark in the shape of an iron - his wife was thinking about other things.

Jennifer gains color (knowledge) from reading and many citizens had gained color from the rain. Mr. Johnson gained color from Mrs. Parker.

The next day the town wakes up to find Mr. Johnson's store window painted with a large picture of Mrs. Parker in the nude. The citizens are enraged and destroy his shop. Later, Mrs. Parker is attacked by many non-colored citizens. David fights them off and gains his color. At the end of the day, the citizens in color congregate at Mr. Johnson's shop while the black and white citizens gather at city hall. The non-colored citizens create a list of rules restricting activities to things that don't involve change.

David and Mr. Johnson fight the conformity by painting one side of city hall. They are thrown in prison and put to trial with no lawyer to keep things "pleasant." Segregation is obvious when the colored citizens are forced to sit in the upper courthouse and the non-colored in the lower seating. David explains to those assembled that feelings exist, and not everything has to be perfect. He walks to Mr. Parker who is still uncolored and makes him realize that he loves Mrs. Parker for more that just making him food. He actually has feelings for her.

The Mayor is outraged and tells David to leave. David walks up to the Mayor's stand, and angers him more until his face turns color because of the feelings. The mayor runs out of the Courthouse and a citizen tells everyone the whole town is now in color.

Jennifer decides to go to college in the world of Pleasantville saying that she has a better chance there than in her real school where she smoked and failed classes. She leaves on a Greyhound bus that had newly appeared. David leaves Pleasantville using the remote and finds his mother depressed. She is having relationship problems of her own. David uses the knowledge he gained in Pleasantville to comfort her and she finds happiness.

The film closes with Mr. And Mrs. Parker sitting on a bench. The camera zooms in Mr. Parker, who admits that he is glad that he doesn’t know what will happen next, the scene then moves to Mrs. Parker, who smiles at him. However, when the camera returns to Mr. Parker, it reveals that he had been replaced by Mr. Johnson. This lets the viewers know, the Mrs. Parker, does in fact, settle with Mr. Johnson.

Cast

  • Tobey Maguire as David. David is the boy of the film who feels out of place in the 1990s at the beginning of the film and is more at home in the dream world of Pleasantville. After being transported into the world which he idolizes, David begins to realize that the perceived happiness in Pleasantville is not nearly as fulfilling. He eventually sees Pleasantville not as the utopia he once imagined but as a dystopia as the freedom of choice and expression is severely limited. His transformation happens as he evolves from dreamy outcast to leader of the changes that take place in Pleasantville.
  • Reese Witherspoon as Jennifer. Jennifer, David's twin sister, is in many ways the opposite of her brother. She is initially dismayed at the absence of sex in Pleasantville, but her own personality asserts itself, and she sparks the initial changes in the town. As the story continues, she begins to understand the limitations she has placed on herself in her own life. Her reading of a D.H. Lawrence novel signified her effort to change herself, and thus, by the end of the film she decides to stay (for a while) in a place where she has changed and to attend college.
  • William H. Macy as George Parker. George is the stereotypical 1950s working father with cues directly from shows such as Leave it to Beaver and Father Knows Best. He is very averse to change and when the town begins to change, he does not know how to cope. He remains black and white through nearly the entire film until David helps him realize how much he really loves his wife.
  • Joan Allen as Betty Parker. Betty starts as the typical 1950s stay-at-home mother but evolves in emotions much more quickly than her husband. This causes conflict starting with her change from black and white to color after Jennifer recommends masturbation. She initially tries to cover up this affliction but then decides she should not be ashamed. Her love triangle with Bill Johnson also becomes an issue showing that such taboo events did occur even in 1950s culture.
  • Jeff Daniels as Bill Johnson. Bill starts the film completely unable to do anything that is not specifically defined in his repetitive list of tasks. This changes however when David inadvertently teaches him a small level of autonomy. This autonomy progresses and Bill begins acting out his desire to be creative and paint. Bill evolves into the central revolutionary in the film going so far as to paint a nude mural on one of his windows of Betty Parker. After the town turns fully Technicolor it is revealed in the last shot that George is replaced by him sitting on the bench next to Betty.
  • Don Knotts as the TV Repairman. Don Knotts plays a small but memorable role as the TV repairman granting David his wish of being part of Pleasantville. While shown to hate the change happening to his town, the repairman is shown with a smile on his face after David turns from aloofness to compassion for his mother.
  • Jane Kaczmarek as David's Mom. David's mom plays the foil to Betty by never cooking or cleaning, and shattering an hour of curse-less dialogue with "fuck" (at 1:53:56) at the end of the film. David parallels his treatment of Betty by wiping the make-up off her face and consoling her, showing a complete change since the film's start.
  • J.T. Walsh as Big Bob. Big Bob plays the town's mayor with McCarthy undertones. He is the most reactionary in the town and decides that colors are indecent. Many subtle references to Triumph of the Will are made in the closing court scene with Big Bob playing the lead. Even he turns to color as he expresses fierce anger towards David. Upon seeing his new face he flees the court room in shame leaving the town to its own devices, ultimately freeing it. This was actor J.T. Walsh's final film as he died of a heart attack shortly after filming.

Themes

Director Gary Ross states, "This movie is about the fact that personal repression gives rise to larger political oppression...That when we're afraid of certain things in ourselves or we're afraid of change, we project those fears on to other things, and a lot of very ugly social situations can develop". [1]

Robert Beuka says in his book SuburbiaNation, “Pleasantville is a morality tale concerning the values of contemporary suburban American by holding that social landscape up against both the Utopian and the dystopian visions of suburbia that emerged in the 1950’s” [2]

Robert McDaniel of Film and History described the town as the perfect place, "It never rains, the highs and lows rest at 72 degrees, the fire department exists only to rescue treed cats, and the basketball team never misses the hoop." However, McDaniel says, "Pleasantville is a false hope. David's journey tells him only that there is no "right" life, no model for how things are "supposed to be'".[3]

Reception

The movie stands with an 86% "fresh" rating at Rotten Tomatoes.[4] Noted film critic Roger Ebert gave the film four out of four stars calling it "one of the best and most original films of the year".[5]

Awards and nominations

The film won the following accolades:

The film was nominated for the following achievements:

  • Academy Awards (1998)
    • Best Art Direction/Set Decoration - Jeannine Claudia Oppewall and Jay Hart
    • Best Costume Design - Judianna Makovsky
    • Best Music, Original Dramatic Score - Randy Newman

Music

The soundtrack features many staples from the 1950s such as "Be-Bop-A-Lula" by Gene Vincent and the 1961 classic "At Last" by Etta James. The main score for the film was composed by Randy Newman; he received an Oscar nomination in the original music category. The soundtrack does however feature some contemporary artists and includes two songs by Fiona Apple, who uses a similar scene in her "Across the Universe" video.

The film also uses musical compositions that reflect the theme of change, innovation and challenging conventional norms. Take Five by Dave Brubeck presented in a 5/4 time signature, very unusual at the time of its release in 1959. Composer Claude Debussy's Claire de lune is also featured in the film. This piece, among others in the popular Suite bergamasque, presented what were radical harmonies at the end of the 19th century that have had a major and enduring influence on modern musical composition.

Soundtrack

Released: October 13 1998
Genre: Pop
Label: Sony Music

Track listing

  1. "Across the Universe" - Fiona Apple – 5:07
  2. "Dream Girl" - Robert and Johnny – 1:57
  3. "Be-Bop-A-Lula" - Gene Vincent – 2:36
  4. "Lawdy Miss Clawdy" - Larry Williams – 2:11
  5. "Sixty Minute Man" - Billy Ward & the Dominoes – 2:28
  6. "Take Five" - The Dave Brubeck Quartet – 5:25
  7. "At Last" - Etta James – 3:00
  8. "(Let Me Be Your) Teddy Bear" - Elvis Presley – 1:47
  9. "Rave On" - Buddy Holly and the Crickets – 1:49
  10. "Please Send Me Someone to Love" - Fiona Apple – 4:01
  11. "So What" - Miles Davis – 9:04
  12. "Suite from Pleasantville" - Randy Newman – 8:11

Further reading

  • Beuka, Robert A. SuburbiaNation: Reading Suburban Landscape in Twentieth-Century American Fiction and Film. 1st ed. New York: Palgrave Macmillian, 2004. 14-15

References

  1. ^ Review for Pleasantville (1998)
  2. ^ Beuka, Robert A. SuburbiaNation: Reading Suburban Landscape in Twentieth-Century American Fiction and Film. 1st ed. New York: Palgrave Macmillian, 2004. 14-15.
  3. ^ McDaniel, Robb. "Pleasantville (Ross 1998)." Rev. of Pleasantville. Film and History May-June 2002: 85-86.
  4. ^ http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/pleasantville/?critic=columns&sortby=name&name_order=asc&view=#mo
  5. ^ http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/19981001/REVIEWS/810010301/1023

External links


Preceded by
Practical Magic
Box office number-one films of 1998 (USA)
October 25, 1998
Succeeded by
John Carpenter's Vampires

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