Laurel Canyon

2003 "Somewhere between Hollywood and the rest of the world."
6.4| 1h43m| R| en| More Info
Released: 07 March 2003 Released
Producted By: Antidote Films
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website: https://www.sonyclassics.com/laurelcanyon
Info

When an uptight young man and his fiancée move into his libertine mother's house, the resulting clash of life attitudes shakes everyone up.

Genre

Drama

Watch Online

Laurel Canyon (2003) is now streaming with subscription on Starz

Director

Lisa Cholodenko

Production Companies

Antidote Films

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Laurel Canyon Audience Reviews

Matrixston Wow! Such a good movie.
Pluskylang Great Film overall
Intcatinfo A Masterpiece!
InformationRap This is one of the few movies I've ever seen where the whole audience broke into spontaneous, loud applause a third of the way in.
tbills2 Laurel Canyon is obnoxiously lull and a tad fruitless at times, like lazy suburbanite stoners glued to a couch, however it's overwhelmingly beautiful as it communicates softly experienced human heartfelt messages with love and real vibrancy and vulnerability. I love Kate. I tend to like Kate in this when she's laying naked in bed, or chitchatting, or just standing there looking beautiful, or wearing her glasses playing Scrabble on an airplane flight, or taking off her seatbelt in the passenger seat talking with Christian in the car applying her lipstick in the mirror visor, or kissing, or rolling her luggage by the pool, or introducing herself to Frances and the crew, or looking at framed photos listening to Steely Dan, or kindly declining invites because she's so tired, or getting comfortable in her new place, or getting ready for bed in her pajamas, or going through books and records, or writing on her computer in her glasses again, or explaining her work, or picking out food to eat, or being the cutest woman in the whole world, or jogging back up the hill with food, or getting on the back of the motorbike strapping on her helmet and holding on tight, or grocery shopping holding her purse, or offering pizza, or accepting a drink, or waking up to a cell call, or kissing again, or inquiring Natascha over coffee, or kissing again, or jogging again, or typing on her computer in her glasses again but this time with wet hair, or thinking, or hearing the music from the balcony, or sending emails, or walking in a room, or smoking a joint, or reading the morning newspaper in her pajamas again, or talking about the studio, or greeting the friendly dog, or checking out the lovely place, or kissing again, or walking by the pool again, or sitting on the bed, or smoking a joint again, or critiquing the band, or skimming Spin magazine in bed, or keeping on talking about the porno magazines, or kissing again, or going down under the sheets, or talking on the phone again, or walking out to the pool at night in her bare feet with skinny dipping Frances and Alessandro, or taking a shot, or relaxing with a drink by the pool, or hating to get wet, or stripping off her wet clothes and getting in the heated pool, or splish-splashing around, or kissing again, ok and now Frances and Kate are kissing, oh you get the picture. I love Kate Beckinsale she's so beautiful. Frances and Natascha are too. I've never seen intensely gifted Christian act so unintensively. I like it. He's Batman.
leal-895-895113 Just something to keep the audience watching, I found this movie lacking in the True to Life column. Bale- as the academically successful son of a mother who may have not been the best rolemodel for someone aspiring to be very detail oriented and on schedule. Bale- who can intervene when another parent is being too harsh/uncaring about their child, but cannot help but attack his mother for her faults. Bekinsale- who her life behind to follow her fiancée in his quest for a better education, yet allows drugs/bad-boy image to draw her away from her love and career a bit too easily. Bunk! Saving grace: the mom played very true to life. (singing by bad boy band lead is not worth a jukebox dime)
Desertman84 Writer/director Lisa Cholodenko follows up her much-acclaimed 1997 debut High Art with this examination of a young couple seduced into a hedonistic, left-coast lifestyle. Taking its title from its central locale, Laurel Canyon focuses on a pair of upper-middle class lovebirds from the East Coast who relocate to Los Angeles.The film stars Frances McDormand, Christian Bale, Kate Beckinsale, Natascha McElhone, and Alessandro Nivola.Freshly graduating from Harvard,Sam and Alex are eager to continue their medical studies out West, but they need some lodging while they hunt for a home. Enter Jane, Sam's estranged mom, who's more than willing to put the couple up in her lavish digs. Jane is a successful record producer whose latest charge -- both in the studio and in her bedroom -- is Ian , a brazen, libidinous twenty-something Brit-rocker. As Sam and Alex settle in at Jane's, they gradually lose their straight-and-narrow approach to life and begin to experiment. Alex takes to Ian and Jane, while Sam is wooed by co-worker Sara.This film is a character-study about self-realization.The performances of the actors and actresses involved were worthy of commendation.Frances McDormand is terrific in her new role as record producer,mother,and corrupter of curious girls.While the rest like Bale,Beckinsale and Nivola were outstanding as well.But inspite of its unconventional storyline,the movie will leave people hanging and with a feeling unsatisfied as the movie turns into entertainment instead of providing better explanations about the characters in it except for the fact that they are seduced by the culture of Los Angeles - wherein Laurel Canyon is located and nothing more.
MBunge This might have been a good film if someone had been able to say "enough" while they were making it. I'm not sure who's at fault here. It could be a self-indulgent writer/director, feckless producers, meddling studio executives or demanding actors. Whoever is to blame, there are simply too many characters going in too many directions that are too disconnected from each other. Those machinations leave too little room to explore inter- and intrapersonal conflicts that are sparked by plot devices and smothered by too much back story.Sam and Alex (Christian Bale and Kate Beckinsale) are a young unmarried couple. He's a psychiatrist and she's his smarter half, going for her PHD in genetics. They move to the West Coast for Sam's new job and have to move in with his complicated mother Jane (Frances McDormand). She's a record producer trying to finish up a new CD with the band of her young boyfriend Ian (Alessandro Nivola). As Alex tries to finish her dissertation, she gets caught up in the rock-n-roll atmosphere at Jane's house and quickly morphs into a hanger on who's attracted to both Ian and Jane. Meanwhile, Sam gets caught up in a mutual attraction with an inexplicably Israeli doctor (Natascha McElhone) at his new hospital. On top of all that, add in a running battle between Jane and a record company executive (Melissa De Sousa) and Sam's attempts to help a troubled young man with a mother who's like the anti-matter universe version of Jane.Laurel Canyon isn't poorly directed or poorly performed and none of its individual scenes are poorly written. The film as a whole, though is overstuffed and undercooked. The characters have to room to breathe, the relationships have no time to grow and the overall story is never able to get anywhere. Sam and Alex's relationship is barely established on screen before they start drifting apart and since there's no way to be really invested in them being together, there's no drama in seeing that union strained. Sam and Jane are supposed to have a troubled and distant relationship because Jane is a self-centered free spirit who never really parented her son. But their family history is never more than hinted at, Jane spends most of the movie behaving in relatively appropriate ways and Sam and Jane probably spend less time together on screen than Alex and Jane. The movie tells us there's a lot of disappointment and regret between mother and son, but never explains it and barely displays because the story spends so much time on so many other things.There's also about as much depth to Ian and Jane's love affair as the average couple in a porno movie. They're together because the script says they're together and because there's nothing to that connection, there's no emotional resonance when Ian and Jane get involved with Alex. You know such a threesome is wrong but it doesn't feel wrong because you don't feel anything about any of the characters. It's really just titillating watching the sexy Kate Beckinsale romp around with the equally sexy Alessandro Nivola and the handsome Frances McDormand.Someone needed to sit down and figure out what was the point of this film. Is it about a young couple finding their love challenged by completely unfamiliar surroundings and behavior? Is it about a mother and son getting over their unpleasant past? Is it about a sheltered young woman discovering a new lifestyle and having to decide what kind of person she is? Is it about a young man who has everything he thinks he wants but then discovers something he wants something else? Laurel Canyon tries to be all of that and more. The result is that it ends up being about nothing.This certainly isn't an aggressively terrible movie, though the ending falls completely flat because the story is too busy to properly build up to it. Watching this film, though, is an ultimately unsatisfying and unmoving experience.