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IMDbPro

The Hanging Garden

  • 1997
  • R
  • 1h 31m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
3.1K
YOUR RATING
The Hanging Garden (1997)
Trailer
Play trailer0:31
1 Video
20 Photos
DramaRomance

William, a once obese and depressed adolescent, is able to move past his teenage years when he moves to the city and comes out as being gay. When he returns home though, he can't cope with h... Read allWilliam, a once obese and depressed adolescent, is able to move past his teenage years when he moves to the city and comes out as being gay. When he returns home though, he can't cope with his memories.William, a once obese and depressed adolescent, is able to move past his teenage years when he moves to the city and comes out as being gay. When he returns home though, he can't cope with his memories.

  • Director
    • Thom Fitzgerald
  • Writer
    • Thom Fitzgerald
  • Stars
    • Chris Leavins
    • Kerry Fox
    • Ian Parsons
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    3.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Thom Fitzgerald
    • Writer
      • Thom Fitzgerald
    • Stars
      • Chris Leavins
      • Kerry Fox
      • Ian Parsons
    • 30User reviews
    • 19Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 21 wins & 14 nominations total

    Videos1

    The Hanging Garden
    Trailer 0:31
    The Hanging Garden

    Photos19

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    Top cast24

    Edit
    Chris Leavins
    Chris Leavins
    • Sweet William
    Kerry Fox
    Kerry Fox
    • Rosemary
    Ian Parsons
    • Little Sweet William
    Peter MacNeill
    Peter MacNeill
    • Whiskey Mac
    Troy Veinotte
    • Teen Sweet William
    Mark Austin
    • Preacher
    Joel Keller
    Joel Keller
    • Fletcher
    • (as Joel S. Keller)
    Heather Rankin
    • Black-Eyed Susan
    Christine Dunsworth
    • Violet
    Seana McKenna
    • Iris
    Joan Orenstein
    • Grace
    Ashley MacIsaac
    Ashley MacIsaac
    • Basil
    Jocelyn Cunningham
    • Laurel
    Jim Faraday
    • Mr. MacDougal
    Sarah Polley
    Sarah Polley
    • Teen Rosemary
    Renee Penney
    • Grace the Nun
    Martha Irving
    Martha Irving
    • Dusty Miller
    Annabelle Dexter
    Annabelle Dexter
    • Bud
    • (as Annabelle Raine Dexter)
    • Director
      • Thom Fitzgerald
    • Writer
      • Thom Fitzgerald
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews30

    6.83.1K
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    Featured reviews

    burneyfan

    A film difficult to appreciate.

    The main obstacle in the way of my enjoying this film is the disconcerting elements of surrealism and irrationality inserted into a film that is in every other way naturalistic. I must say I had some difficulty coming to terms with this aspect of the film which at first glance made no sense at all. I was irritated by it. Taken at face value this aspect of the film was ludicrous. It goes like this:

    We have a grotesquely obese teenager who has a homosexual encounter. He is caught in the act by his grandmother and, as a result, is taken by his mother to see a young woman who's forte is sexual initiation. Either this, his previous experience or his obesity, depresses him so much that he commits suicide. And we know he succeeds because all the flowers in the garden die with him. But, and this is where the madness and contradictions start, he comes back from the dead ten years later metamorphosed into a handsome, slim young man! And he finds his doppelganger still hanging from the tree in the garden!

    Now a doppelganger is a figment of someone's imagination, a wraith that doesn't really exist; and if it had remained as such, say a symbolic representation of his earlier life, I would have had little difficulty in going along with it. But no. He touches it and his dad hugs it and he then buries it and his dad tries to dig it up. Well, you can't bury a doppelganger, so it must be a real body, a body that's been hanging from a tree for ten years without showing any signs of decomposition. And if it is a real dead body and it's his real dead body, how come he's still alive?

    Now if you can accept all this as not being real behaviour but as some elaborate metaphor for his wish to be free of his past and his dad's wish to cling onto it, then you might just enjoy the film. It has a lot of good things going for it.
    9Teach-7

    the Garden of mismatched souls

    Sweet William, Rosemary, Violet, Basil and the rest. Named after flowers and herbs, people growing together in your typical family garden of mismatched souls. Little William, trying to be something that sets him apart from the rest, something nobody can touch or change. He grows up to be a gay and obese teenager. Lusting after his closest friend. Not the easiest of lives. We meet Willy 10 years later, returning home to celebrate his sister Rosemary's wedding. He is now a slim, attractive young man. But what has happened during those ten years? And who is the little boy running around the house?

    Every time I watch this small masterpiece, new layers of meaning turn up. The plot structure gives away some undiscovered truths, together with dialogue pointers I didn't notice before. That, to me, is a film worth seeing! When we showed this at our local film society, it got a great reception, one of the best we ever had for a film.

    The Hanging garden is short, bittersweet and - sadly - true to life. You'll find something in this garden for you, whoever you may be!
    9bgilch

    Hanging Garden is a small, intensely felt film abo...

    Hanging Garden is a small, intensely felt film about a family in tatters and a son whose own problems are eclipsed until he does something he can't take back. Given the film's major conceit is a breach in family fabric that can't be woven back in, magic realism is an applicable term--but only so if shot through the caustic self-wounding humour of the Maritimes, where I lived for six years. If this seems dour, then consider the take-off marriage sequence that opens the film: drunkeness, homoeroticism, Celtic music madness and four-dozen f-words. This film is a gorgeous if painful tribute to growing up in a remove that already seems past its age, in an ocean playground whose garden has gone to seed. This film was ranked, and fairly, as the best Canadian film of 1997 by the Jay Stone of the Globe & Mail (Canada's national newspaper), and if that makes Americans laugh, then consider this is a ranking ahead of Sweet Hereafter, which only made it to the Best Director Oscar Nomination and Cannes Recognition for Atom Egoyan and was also Roger Ebert's #2 film of the year. Adulations all around are deserving for this home-grown production. The film only suffers from inexperience with some actors and having to come up with a conclusion for a tale that can't logically have one. And the parents are excellent in it too, especially the mum. At the singular, crucial sequence of the film all the elements of the film - colour, symbolism, lamentation and ladyslipperknots - fuse in breathtaking splendor, and I mean so in the inhaled gasp that graces the east coast 'yes '. It still stuns me in memoriam. Four Stars * * * *
    8wisewebwoman

    Holds up well

    I recently saw this again having first seen it in the theater on its release and been spellbound by it.

    Thom Fitzgerald is both the writer and director of an exploration into a family's dysfunction and disintegration amid their getting together for the wedding of the daughter.

    The film shows the family in both the present and the past and centres around the newly returned son, Sweet William, the father, Whiskey Mac and his wife, Iris, and their relationship to their three children. The father is a nursery man/gardener and the segments of the movie are titled with the names of flowers. As are the children of the family.

    In the past, Sweet William, an unhappy overweight boy is conflicted by his latent homosexuality. He develops a relationship with his friend Fletcher. When they are caught making love, the family completely falls apart.

    The message of the film revolves around the theme of family secrets and how attempts to bury or ignore them serves only as a temporary cover-up. They will out.

    Peter MacMeill, Kerry Fox, Chris Leavins, Troy Veinoitte, Seana McKenna and Sarah Polley give able, believable performances.

    Again, it is one of those under-appreciated Canadian gems that have not been brought to a wider audience. And deserve to be.

    And it has one of the most surprising, uplifting endings!

    8 out of 10. Bravos to all involved.
    10chapin-2

    One of the best films I have ever seen.

    A lovely, intelligent film that challenges the viewer's assumptions about reality, while celebrating the power of memory and redemption. I have rarely been so moved by the beauty of a film, visually and verbally. The performances are real, the writing superb. It also boasts one of the most hilarious weddings in cinema history.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The film won the People's Choice Award for Best Film and the jury award for Best Canadian Feature at TIFF.
    • Quotes

      Grace the Nun: Father, can you come and bless this Virgin

      [statue]

      Grace the Nun: for the lady, please?

      Iris: No no, that's not necessary, please don't bother him ...

      Grace the Nun: That's what he's here for, it's included! Father, are you ready to bless the Virgin or what?

      [The priest comes up to the store counter and picks up the Virgin statuette.]

      Grace the Nun: Oh hang on now, she hasn't got the receipt. How many times do I tell you, don't bless the Virgin until you get the receipt!

    • Connections
      Featured in Weird Sex and Snowshoes: A Trek Through the Canadian Cinematic Psyche (2004)
    • Soundtracks
      Fiddle Medley: Bridal Chorus from 'Lohengrin' / Hamish the Carpenter / John of Badenyon / Glencoe March / Father John Angus Rankin Strathspey / Put Me in the Box / The Castle Hornpipe / John Morrison / There Came a Young Man / The Hills of Glenorchy
      Written by Richard Wagner/ traditional / traditional / Dan R. MacDonald / Donald Angus Beaton / traditional / traditional / traditional / traditional

      Performed by Ashley MacIsaac

      Courtesy of A&M Records

      A division of Polygram Group Canada

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    FAQ17

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 8, 1998 (United Kingdom)
    • Countries of origin
      • Canada
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Den hängande trädgården
    • Filming locations
      • Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, Canada
    • Production companies
      • Alliance Communications Corporation
      • Canadian Film or Video Production Tax Credit (CPTC)
      • Channel Four Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • CA$1,500,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $24,909
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 31m(91 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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