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Ice Storm

Original title: The Ice Storm
  • 1997
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 52m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
62K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
3,911
649
Kevin Kline, Christina Ricci, Sigourney Weaver, Joan Allen, and Tobey Maguire in Ice Storm (1997)
Theatrical Trailer from Fox Searchlight Pictures
Play trailer2:31
1 Video
86 Photos
Drama

In 1973 suburbia, several middle-class families experimenting with substance abuse and the swinging lifestyle find their lives spinning beyond their control.In 1973 suburbia, several middle-class families experimenting with substance abuse and the swinging lifestyle find their lives spinning beyond their control.In 1973 suburbia, several middle-class families experimenting with substance abuse and the swinging lifestyle find their lives spinning beyond their control.

  • Director
    • Ang Lee
  • Writers
    • Rick Moody
    • James Schamus
  • Stars
    • Kevin Kline
    • Joan Allen
    • William Cain
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.3/10
    62K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    3,911
    649
    • Director
      • Ang Lee
    • Writers
      • Rick Moody
      • James Schamus
    • Stars
      • Kevin Kline
      • Joan Allen
      • William Cain
    • 324User reviews
    • 118Critic reviews
    • 72Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 BAFTA Award
      • 8 wins & 33 nominations total

    Videos1

    The Ice Storm
    Trailer 2:31
    The Ice Storm

    Photos86

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    Top cast47

    Edit
    Kevin Kline
    Kevin Kline
    • Ben Hood
    Joan Allen
    Joan Allen
    • Elena Hood
    William Cain
    • Ted Shackley
    Sigourney Weaver
    Sigourney Weaver
    • Janey Carver
    Henry Czerny
    Henry Czerny
    • George Clair
    Tobey Maguire
    Tobey Maguire
    • Paul Hood
    Christina Ricci
    Christina Ricci
    • Wendy Hood
    Elijah Wood
    Elijah Wood
    • Mikey Carver
    Adam Hann-Byrd
    Adam Hann-Byrd
    • Sandy Carver
    David Krumholtz
    David Krumholtz
    • Francis Davenport
    Jamey Sheridan
    Jamey Sheridan
    • Jim Carver
    Kate Burton
    Kate Burton
    • Dorothy Franklin
    Michael Cumpsty
    Michael Cumpsty
    • Philip Edwards
    Maia Danziger
    Maia Danziger
    • Mrs. Gadd
    Katie Holmes
    Katie Holmes
    • Libbets Casey
    Michael Egerman
    • Pharmacist
    Christine Farrell
    • Marie Earle
    Glenn Fitzgerald
    Glenn Fitzgerald
    • Neil Conrad
    • Director
      • Ang Lee
    • Writers
      • Rick Moody
      • James Schamus
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews324

    7.362.3K
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    Featured reviews

    hermit58

    disturbing, dark, and brutally honest film, three stars

    Ang Lee is a perfectionist, and it shows here in this excellent film about relationships between friends, lovers and families. The attention to detail is second to none, this film is wonderfully crafted, the landscape is filled in every scene with the beauty of nature or the ugliness of the humans that inhabit it. The dysfunctional family is not only observed, it is clinically dissected and placed under a microscope. So many divergent paths these characters take, so many of them the wrong paths, it is hard to look away, because morbid curiosity grips all of us at times. Sigourney Weaver and Joan Allen are both outstanding here and well supported by the rest of this talented cast. Highly recommended.
    8=G=

    A subtly sardonic look inside middle-class Americana.

    "Ice Storm" not only describes the weather in the Connecticut countryside but is also a metaphor for the pall which hangs over a pallid and dysfunctional middle-class suburban family of four in the 1970s. Sporting a stellar cast with Ang Lee at the helm, this well crafted, sensitive, artful production takes the audience into four lives outwardly living the "American Dream" while inwardly existing in a state of empty unfulfillment and quiet desperation. The tedious and laconic nature of the film may lose the less patient audience while those with a taste for psychodrama should enjoy it.
    9littlebliss

    Best movie in penetrating average American lifestyle. Remarkable, melancholy.Five Stars, vote 9 out of 10.

    I was astonished to find out how many bad reviews in this site for "Ice Storm" here. I voted 9 out of 10 without hesitating. I've seen this movie twice, and the 2nd time was even more disturbing in a remarkable sense, which compelled me into a deep thinking mode. Phillip, (on the message board), you're so right! `Ice Storm' was indeed a gem that entitles equally what "American Beauty" has earned. Both movies were focusing on the American mid-class's love lives, their middle-aged marriage crisis, and teenagers beguiled by sex. `Ice storm" was filmed in a musically melancholic tune than `American Beauty'. It's about life, brutally honest, and objective. It's about the rotten love lives of average American couples, inwardly, those who would dare to break the rules, for exchanging a moment of stealing pleasure, such as Sigourney Weaver; Kevin Kline, who has surrendered to sexual seduction; Jane Ellen, Kevin Kline's wife, frustrated by the dysfunctional marriage, yet tuning away from sexual liberation. Sadly, the victims of typical contemporary Hollywoodia pace has found `Ice Storm' a `slow and dull' movie that makes them yawning. Why not simply obtain satisfactions over weeping for an affected Hollywood's love tale `Titanic'. Other noteworthy, is the music scores of `Ice Storm' is depressing, enchanting, very beautiful.
    10jhclues

    One of Ang Lee's Finest Films

    The difference between adolescence and adulthood can be defined in terms of years or age, but when it comes right down to it, the only real difference is in the experiences the added years provide. As we mature, we are at some point confronted with the realization-- some sooner, some later-- that age and experience do not necessarily equate to satisfaction and personal identity in our lives, the two things we are all, though perhaps subconsciously, striving to attain. But it's an elusive butterfly we're chasing; and at a certain age, the lack of fulfillment in one's life may be dismissed out-of-hand by some as a midlife crisis in a feeble attempt to justify certain actions or attitudes. Attaching such a label to it, however, is merely simplifying a state of being that seems to be perpetually misunderstood, and we resort to using psychological ploys on ourselves in order to rationalize away behavior that is often unacceptable in the cold light of reason and morality. This, of course, is not a unique situation, but an inevitable step one takes upon reaching an age at which the awareness of mortality begins to set in, which is something we all have to deal with in our own way, in our own time. And it's an issue that lies allegorically at the heart of director Ang Lee's pensive, insightful drama, `The Ice Storm,' in which we discover that-- more often than not-- the adult we become is nothing more than an extension of the adolescent; we may shed the skin of youth, but the awkward confusion and uncertainty remains, albeit manifested in different ways, to which for awhile we may respond in opposition even to our own conscience, creating a double standard in our lives which only serves to exacerbate the confusion and unhappiness, leaving us alone to face the cold and frozen landscapes of our own soul.

    Working from an insightful and intelligent screenplay by James Schamus (who also wrote Lee's `Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon' and `Eat Drink Man Woman,' among others), Lee has crafted and delivered a lyrical and poetic-- though somewhat dark-- film that tells the story of two neighboring families living in Connecticut in the early ‘70s: Ben and Elena Hood (Kevin Kline and Joan Allen) and their children, Paul (Tobey Maguire) and Wendy (Christina Ricci); and Jim and Janey Carver (Jamey Sheridan and Sigourney Weaver) and their children, Mikey (Elijah Wood) and Sandy (Adam Hann-Byrd). And it's a story to which many will be able to relate on a very personal, individual level, as it reflects an issue common to us all-- that of trying to make a tangible connection with someone or something in our life that we can hold on to and take comfort in. Ben and Elena have grown apart; she has distanced herself emotionally and sexually from Ben, and unfulfilled, she longs again for the freedom of her spent youth, while Ben seeks solace in an emotionally vapid but physically satisfying relationship with another woman. Jim, who spends much of his time on the road, has become completely disconnected from his entire family; his children are apathetic to his very presence, and Janey exists in a constant state of promiscuous numbness, yet cold and indifferent to her own husband.

    The Hood and Carver children, meanwhile, are suffering the pains of adolescence and trying to figure out the world in which they live, exploring their feelings with and for one another and attempting to understand the whys and wherefores of it all. And to whom can they turn for guidance in an era that's giving them Nixon and Watergate, new age spiritualism and self-absorbed parents who teach one thing and do another?

    The story unfolds through the eyes of sixteen-year-old Paul, whose meditations on the literal and figurative ice storm that descends upon the two families over a long Thanksgiving weekend forms the narrative of the film. And it's through Paul's observations that Lee so subtly and effectively presents his metaphor, in which he captures the beauty, as well as the ugliness, that inexplicably coexists within and which surrounds the turbulence and turmoil of the Hood's and Carver's world, which is ultimately visited by tragedy as their drama proceeds to it's inevitable climax. It's sensitive material that will undoubtedly touch a nerve with many in the audience, and Lee takes great care to present it accordingly, with a studied finesse that makes it an emotionally involving and thoroughly engrossing drama.

    Lee also knows how to get the best out of his actors, and there are a number of outstanding and memorable performances in this film, beginning with that of Kevin Kline. Kline does comedy well, but he does drama even better, as he proves here with his portrayal of Ben. The final scene of the film, in fact, belongs to Kline, as it is here that we discover the true nature of the man he is in his heart of hearts. It's a superb piece of acting, and one of the real strengths of the film.

    Joan Allen also turns in a strong performance through which she reveals the insufferable inner conflict that so affects Elena's life, and especially her relationship with Ben. And it's in Allen's character, more than any of the others, that we see how fine the line is between the adult and the adolescent. It is not unusual to find a bit of the mother in the daughter; but Allen shows us through Elena just how much of the daughter is actually in the mother, which underscores one of the basic tenets of the film. It's a performance that should've earned Allen an Oscar nomination at the very least.

    Also turning in performances that demand special attention are Maguire, Ricci, Wood and especially Jamey Sheridan, whose portrayal of Jim is one of his best-- it's believable, and totally honest. Penetrating and incisive, `The Ice Storm' is remarkably poignant and absorbing; without question, it's one of Lee's finest films. 10/10.
    spicyburrito

    Tedious exercise in dysfunction

    First I should say, this movie could have been about my town and my family. I grew up in Connecticut and was 11 years old when the ice storm hit. My family was probably the typical dysfunctional unit of the 70's – emotionally clueless, parents headed for divorce (though we didn't know that yet), so I should have been able to relate to this film.

    The problem with the movie is there's no humor, no humanity. It's just one dysfunctional, sad, deviant event after another. It's like someone from another planet was assigned a homework exercise to depict dysfunctional families on Earth. I couldn't relate to the characters and there was no one to like.

    I'll give it 4 stars for the nice cinematography, the all-star cast, the good period sets and clothes. Although Toby Maguire gives his usual staring-into-space, deer-in-headlights, stupid-half-smile, what-am-I-supposed-to-be-doing-again? performance, I thought the rest of the cast did their best with the material – i.e. it wasn't the actors' fault!

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Rick Moody, the author of the novel was so pleased with the film he sobbed through the end credits.
    • Goofs
      There is a yellow plastic Comet container visible near the sink of the Hood home. In 1973 these containers would have been a green cardboard tube with metal top/bottom. Plastic Comet containers did not exist until later.
    • Quotes

      [first lines]

      Train Conductor: Good morning ladies and gentlemen. This train, originating from New York's Grand Central Station, is back in service. Next stop will be New Canaan, Connecticut. New Canaan, Connecticut next stop.

      Paul Hood: [narration] In issue 141 of the Fantastic Four, published in November, 1973, Reed Richards had to use his anti-matter weapon on his own son, who Aannihilus has turn into the Human Atom Bomb. It was a typical predicament for the Fantastic Four, because they weren't like other superheroes. They were more like a family. And the more power they had, the more harm they could do to each other without even knowing it. That was the meaning of the Fantastic Four: that a family is like your own personal anti-matter. Your family is the void you emerge from, and the place you return to when you die. And that's the paradox - the closer you're drawn back in, the deeper into the void you go.

    • Connections
      Edited into The Dave Gorman Collection (2001)
    • Soundtracks
      Dirty Love
      Written by Frank Zappa

      Used by permission of Munchkin Music

      Performed by Frank Zappa

      Courtesy of Rykodisc

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    FAQ17

    • How long is The Ice Storm?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 11, 1998 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • La tormenta de hielo
    • Filming locations
      • New Canaan, Connecticut, USA(houses belonging to Ben and Elena Hood and Janey Carver)
    • Production companies
      • Searchlight Pictures
      • Good Machine
      • Canal+ Droits Audiovisuels
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $18,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $8,038,061
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $75,183
      • Sep 28, 1997
    • Gross worldwide
      • $8,038,061
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 52 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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