Sideways (2004)
Genre:
Comedy / Drama / Romance (more)
Tagline: In search of wine. In search of women. In search of themselves.
Plot Outline: Two men reaching middle age with not much to show but disappointment, embark on a week long road trip through California's wine country, just as one is about to take a trip down the aisle. (more) (view trailer)
User Comments:
A truly vintage comedy.
(more)
User Rating:
        
7.9/10 (31,990 votes)
top 250: #243
MPAA: Rated R for language, some strong sexual content and nudity.
Runtime:
123 min
Country:
USA
Language:
English / Armenian
Color:
Color
Sound Mix:
DTS / Dolby Digital
Certification:
Taiwan:R-18 / Argentina:13 / Australia:MA (original rating) / Australia:M (re-rating on appeal) / Brazil:16 / Canada:13+ (Qu�bec) / Canada:18A (Alberta/British Columbia/Ontario) / Chile:TE / Czech Republic:12 / Finland:K-15 / Germany:6 / Hong Kong:III / Malaysia:(Banned) / Mexico:B15 / Netherlands:12 / Peru:PT / Philippines:R-18 / Singapore:M18 / South Korea:18 / Switzerland:12 (canton of Geneva) / Switzerland:12 (canton of Vaud) / Switzerland:14 (canton of Zurich) / UK:15 / USA:R / Norway:11 / Canada:AA (original rating) / Ireland:15 / Indonesia:Dewasa
Trivia:
The name of the character, sitting with his son, who tells Jack to tone down his language is Dr. Hendricks, the principal from Alexander Payne's Election (1999). (His name appears in the credits as "Vacationing Dr. Walt Hendricks" to explain his presence in California instead of Nebraska.)
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Goofs:
Anachronisms: The dance show Miles is watching in the hotel room is MTV's "The Grind," which ran from 1992 until the summer of 1996.
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Quotes:
[first lines]
Miles Raymond:
Fuck.
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Awards:
Won Oscar.
Another 90 wins
&
30 nominations
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User Comments:
84 out of 150 people found the following comment useful:-
A truly vintage comedy., 25 October 2004
Author:
george.schmidt ([email protected]) from fairview, nj
SIDEWAYS (2004) **** Paul Giamatti, Thomas Haden Church, Virginia
Madsen, Sandra Oh. (DIR: Alexander Payne)
A truly vintage comedy. Paul Giamatti is one of our finest character
actors who seems to be neck-and-neck with William H. Macy on cornering
the market of portraying losers as a cottage industry and in the latest
endeavor of hapless misanthropes he may have found Oscar gold.
Giamatti stars as Miles Raymond, a miserable mope of a man who realizes
he is never going to amount to anything especially given the fact that
he is his own worst enemy in his highly critical outlook on life
particularly on two things he holds dear: his struggling attempts to
become a writer of notice and his taste in wine. The latter leads him
to a certain road trip to salvation when he embarks upon a few days of
r&r away from his stagnant day job as a middle school English teacher
with his best friend and former college roomie Jack (Church in easily
the career defining role of his life since his hey day on the TV sitcom
'Wings') whose impending nuptials is Miles' wedding gift as the best
man. Jack, a long-in-the tooth second-rate soap actor whose 15 minutes
are at a close 14:59 is adamant about getting laid for one last time
before his commitment to a younger woman who clearly deserves better
(and Jack shrewdly knows this).
As the duo drive through the sun-dappled wine country of Northern
California in a road trip not unlike two virginal, horny teens looking
to pop their respective cherries, they come across two unlikely
conquests. One is the shapely and surprisingly-down-to-earth waitress
Maya (Madsen in a career comeback of epic proportions shines through
the Giamatti gloom) who strikes a fancy to the depressed Miles while
Jack has his sights on the sexy wine pourer Stephanie (the sublimely,
reassuringly funny Oh, and real � life wife to director Payne) who also
is charmed by the blithely feckless Jack. What unfolds is a sweet yet
too-good-to-be true few days of bliss and unbridled emotional rescue
for the foursome as they take to one another like ducks to water
although Miles' hesitancy is deeply reasoned since he is still licking
the open wounds of his two-year old divorce.
Payne, one of my favorite filmmakers, doesn't disappoint as he dollops
evenly the tragic-comic proceedings with his frequent long-time
collaborator Jim Taylor in adapting an unpublished novel by Rex Pickett
that has many layers to it and doesn't betray its four intriguing and
ultimately human characters with all their flaws and neuroses on full
display. Each actor shines with a few moments of soliloquies and
dialogue that ring true that will have you laughing til you cry and
vice versa (and that my friend is no easy trick)!
The four actors give supremely wonderfully acted turns and all are
Oscar worthy as well as the screenplay which mixes misery with hope and
some truly funny moments including an anger management golf sequence
that feels like an outtake from 'Caddyshack' and Giamatti's drunken
phone call to his ex is on par with Jon Favreau's
car-accident-in-slow-motion answering machine mishap in 'Swingers' �
one for the archives. Church makes his borderline jerk a quasi-pathetic
lothario who finally sees the forest for the trees in a surprisingly
moving moment of realization in a teary confessional; Oh unleashes the
old chestnut of a woman's scorn with no-holds-barred and Madsen is a
true welcome back from a seemingly endless string of nothing vehicles
into this warm and welcome turn as comforting as a blanket on a wintry
night in front of a cozy fire.
While it is so easy to resort to the wine as metaphor � as the film
amply does with smart, sharp and pungent dialogue � the film is a
full-bodied, never precocious vintage that needs to be savored in a
desirable bouquet of cinematic finesse.
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