When a young school teacher blows onto the island complete with a VW van and a mini-skirt, Hal Kingswood's mid-life crisis takes a turn for the worse. His daughter Zoe turns to magic to make... Read allWhen a young school teacher blows onto the island complete with a VW van and a mini-skirt, Hal Kingswood's mid-life crisis takes a turn for the worse. His daughter Zoe turns to magic to make things go back the way they were before.When a young school teacher blows onto the island complete with a VW van and a mini-skirt, Hal Kingswood's mid-life crisis takes a turn for the worse. His daughter Zoe turns to magic to make things go back the way they were before.
- Awards
- 4 wins & 8 nominations total
Michèle-Barbara Pelletier
- Anne-Marie Andrews
- (as Michèle Barbara Pelletier)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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So I had heard about this movie and had been wanting to see it for quite some time however being that I could never find it as a rental.. I never had the opportunity. I have lived on the west coast nearly all my life and I find this movie extremely accurate. Especially the cinematography and the school scenes. I think the only small inaccuracy may be the accepting nature of the locals to Wiccan culture, being that back then we were all quite ignorant to it. I do not want to spoil the film but I will say it is quite predictable. However it is not cliché'. This movie also does not smack of typical Canadian movie quality as I find that most Canadian movies do. And what I mean by that is that you should never be able to detect that the movie is Canadian made, because it is low quality and cheesy dialog. This movie somehow avoids that distinction. This movie is reminiscent of the movie "Juno" with a touch of the TV show "The Beachcombers" in it's simplicity and honest charm.
Hello Peter Harcourt. You granted me an interview at Carleton University about my having finished an MA in Philosophy and wanting to study for an MA in Film Studies. But we both agreed even if you only want to watch movies you still keep writing anyway. "The Lotus Eaters" uses very long shots to make it seem like an old '60s movie with the comedic use by all characters staring slightly off camera. The "idyllic setting" of the BC island is rendered by each frame being a composed colour photograph, picture postcard perfect. As for "made for TV" director Paul Shapiro and writer Peggy Thompson spent the rest of their careers doing well with work for TV. As a person nothing but Canadian, I picked up on the school principal in "The Lotus Eaters" REFUSING TO ALLOW HIS FAMILY TO HAVE A TV. I'm so glad movies I identify with stopped me from going to England to study philosophy with a friend of FRLeavis. But I do identify too with the movies in your book "Six European Directors"!!
This film is awful. Not offensive but extremely predictable. The movie follows the life of a small town family in the mid-60's. The father, the principal at the school, is going through a mid-life crisis. Enter a pretty teacher from the big city who starts challenging her students' minds with some thought-provoking stuff, like think for yourself. The principal doesn't agree with her teaching but she is pretty. You can connect the dots. His teenage daughter (Winona Ryder wannabe Tara Frederick) is fed up with the small town lifestyle and wants to live. She gets some bad advice, hangs out with some bad boys and apparently family planning wasn't being taught at her school. Shocking! Seeing that director Paul Shapiro has mainly worked in TV, this movie plays like a more adult version of an after-school special or a very special episode of one of the more mundane sitcoms.
7JPH
In conception a splendid film, investigating the tensions that occur in family life in the idyllic setting of Galiano Island off the coast of British Columbia, _The Lotus Eaters_ is marred by the fact that it has been packaged as a made-for-TV movie, diminishing itself throughout by the addition of chirpy music over potentially powerful scenes, as if to get ready for the interruption of commercials. A pity, really.
I happened to catch this flick on television a couple of years ago. My mother was away taking care of my dying aunt and my father was working double shifts at the hospital. I mention that because the setting was perfect to watch this particular movie. Its peaceful and while seemingly cliché the dialogue and action is pitch-perfect. Its the type of film you want to watch alone on a night when you're in no mood to tune into the news or the regular sit-coms and can't sleep. Its really a shame that it hasn't received wider distribution, especially in the US. I can probably count every good film that's come out of Canada on one hand, and this one goes on my thumb. I'm still looking for a copy.
Did you know
- GoofsThe dog was eating off the plate, leaving the hot-dog. but when the plate was handed to mom, the hot-dog was missing. The dog must have eaten the dog in another take.
- SoundtracksWhy Do Fools Fall in Love?
Written by Frankie Lymon (as Frank Lymon) and George Goldner
Published by Longitude Music Co. & Full Keel Music Co.
Performed by Frankie Lymon and the Teenagers
Courtesy of Warner Special Products
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