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The Laramie Project

  • TV Movie
  • 2002
  • TV-14
  • 1h 37m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
7.2K
YOUR RATING
Janeane Garofalo, Jeremy Davies, Laura Linney, and Camryn Manheim in The Laramie Project (2002)
Trailer
Play trailer0:35
1 Video
39 Photos
True CrimeCrimeDramaHistory

The true story of an American town in the wake of the murder of Matthew Shepard.The true story of an American town in the wake of the murder of Matthew Shepard.The true story of an American town in the wake of the murder of Matthew Shepard.

  • Director
    • Moisés Kaufman
  • Writers
    • Moisés Kaufman
    • Stephen Belber
    • Amanda Gronich
  • Stars
    • Christina Ricci
    • Steve Buscemi
    • Kathleen Chalfant
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    7.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Moisés Kaufman
    • Writers
      • Moisés Kaufman
      • Stephen Belber
      • Amanda Gronich
    • Stars
      • Christina Ricci
      • Steve Buscemi
      • Kathleen Chalfant
    • 76User reviews
    • 7Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 4 Primetime Emmys
      • 5 wins & 18 nominations total

    Videos1

    The Laramie project
    Trailer 0:35
    The Laramie project

    Photos39

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    Top cast74

    Edit
    Christina Ricci
    Christina Ricci
    • Romaine Patterson
    Steve Buscemi
    Steve Buscemi
    • Doc O'Connor
    Kathleen Chalfant
    Kathleen Chalfant
    • Anonymous Female Rancher
    Laura Linney
    Laura Linney
    • Sherry Johnson
    Peter Fonda
    Peter Fonda
    • Doctor Cantway
    Jeremy Davies
    Jeremy Davies
    • Jedadiah Schultz
    Nestor Carbonell
    Nestor Carbonell
    • Moisés Kaufman
    Camryn Manheim
    Camryn Manheim
    • Rebecca Hilliker
    Andy Paris
    • Stephen Belber
    Grant Varjas
    Grant Varjas
    • Greg Pierotti
    • (as Grant James Varjas)
    Kelli Simpkins
    Kelli Simpkins
    • Leigh Fondakowski
    Clea DuVall
    Clea DuVall
    • Amanda Gronich
    Billie McBride
    • Waitress
    Bill Christ
    • Man on the Porch
    Frances Sternhagen
    Frances Sternhagen
    • Marge Murray
    Regina Krueger
    • Alison Mears
    Michael Emerson
    Michael Emerson
    • Reverend
    Margo Martindale
    Margo Martindale
    • Trish Steger
    • Director
      • Moisés Kaufman
    • Writers
      • Moisés Kaufman
      • Stephen Belber
      • Amanda Gronich
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews76

    7.17.1K
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    Featured reviews

    8jotix100

    A murder in Wyoming

    A young gay man brutally killed by two young men trying to make a point about their hatred of homosexuals is the basis of Moises Kaufman's brilliant play seen here a few years ago. On the stage the play is somewhat detached because of the limitations in the text, but as a film, adapted for the screen by Mr. Kaufman, the immediacy of the story is more shocking than in the theater.

    "The Laramie Project" is seen in a documentary fashion. The director and his assistants went to Laramie to investigate the incident that caused a world wide uproar because of the savage way Matthew Shepard's death had caused. In recreating the facts, Mr. Kaufman has dramatized the story by having real actors play the different people in town with whom he and his collaborators talked during the days of the research trip.

    What comes out about the story is that individually, the citizens of Laramie were as shocked as everyone else was. After all, they considerer themselves as pretty tolerant, so why a horrible tragedy like this could ever happened amongst them? In fact, it only takes a pair of misguided individuals, who think thought they would make a statement by inflicting on the unsuspecting Matthew Shepard a punishment he didn't deserve.

    The ensemble cast that play the different parts is an inspired choice. Mr. Kaufman was lucky in amassing such talent that respond so well to his commands. Steve Buscemi, Camryn Manhein, Laura Linney, Amy Madigan, Frances Sternhagen, Christina Ricci, Margo Martindale, Kathleen Chalfant, Terry Kinney, just to name a few, give excellent readings about what really occurred in Laramie.

    Ultimately, Mr. Kaufman makes his point by just letting the citizens of Laramie come to terms with the horrible tragedy that shook their town.
    8dmgoehring

    A Moving Film

    It took me a long time until I finally rented the DVD version of this. I live in Laramie, I go to the University. I didn't arrive here until 2000, but I was, and always have been, a Wyoming resident. Part of me was curious, especially with the actors involved, but another part realized how close to home this was. How close? My drama teacher Lou Anne Wright played Matthew Shepards mother (albeit uncredited).

    When I first started watching this I was really confused. If they were taking a documentary approach, why in the hell would they then use real actors? As I sat and thought about it more, though, it made a bit more sense. The interviews were recorded only audibly at the time of the incident for the play version. You could sit down and reshoot it with the original citizens, but it would no longer feel natural. Plus I doubt they would've gotten all the people to consent to being filmed. Remember this is a small town and anonymity can go a long ways.

    Aside from the acted documentary, I really felt they did a good job of trying to bring Laramie to life. Yes, they did focus a bit too much on the train tracks which are more or less out of town. I've only even seen them a few times in my 3 years here. They seperate Laramie from West Laramie. Not East Laramie from West Laramie, but Laramie from West Laramie, which should tell you something. Aside from that, it felt surreal to watch this. When I stepped outside my dorm afterwards to return it, I was staring right in the face of the hotel sign that at the time of filming read "Hate is Not a Laramie Value." I drove down third street and saw Laramie Lumber, I drove back on 4th and saw the antiquated Spic & Span Laundry. When they talk about how they drove past Walmart when they went out to kill him, I knew that road. I've driven home on that road many a time.

    The characters were also extremely well-acted. For every character I saw portrayed on screen, I've known at least one Wyoming resident that was exactly like them. While some of the performances may have seemed extreme and hokey to some, I felt they had it down pat. I laughed to myself when Buscemi's character spelled out H-O-P-E for emphasis...I've heard the same silly thing done the same way by the same sort of people. Aside from "Live and Let Live" which I can honestly say I've never heard here in 20 years of WY residence (yet was emphasized over and over in the film), I've heard many of the same statements said almost verbatim by people I know.

    The story, of course, is touching, but the route they went of making it the story of Laramie vs. the story of Matthew Shepard made it more than just a movie-of-the-week style thing. You can feel the emotions seeping through the screen. At the angel protest, I felt like jumping up and shouting down the bigoted guy leading the anti-gay side.

    For its authenticity and heart-felt storytelling, I can't help but give this one a strong recommendation.
    SunRock17

    Thoughtful, Stunning.

    A work that is exceptional both in terms of its structure and in terms of the unique nature of the presentation. It brings into sharp focus many of the complex elements of a horror like this and the profound effects which it has on the many disparate participants.

    The quality of the acting is superb evidencing a dedication to the material that goes beyond mere craftwork; many of the performances are obviously from the heart and the soul. Dylan Baker, Amy Madigan, Jeremy Davies, Peter Fonda, Joshua Jackson, and Camryn Manheim are stellar. The courtroom speech by Matthew's Father is historical. The direction is challenging and engaging.

    It takes a truly cold, trite, and hardened heart to dismiss such a moving film predicated solely upon the prejudices, regressive political posturing, and obvious homophobia brought to such dismissals.
    7oalvarez-2

    See the play

    While this film is very powerful for those unfamiliar with the incident and/or the play, I think it loses quite a bit of the depth that the stage version has. The play is a sparkling piece of experimental theater that invariably is produced by small ensembles taking on six to ten roles each. The set is minimalist, usually containing no more than a few chairs and a table. When you take away the visuals, and you take away the famous actors, what are you left with? The words. I think that the movie version takes away from that, with the flashy camera angles and editing. The characters (as they became in the movie; they are more true-to-life in the play) were pretty well-portrayed in the movie, with some disappointing exceptions (Jedediah Schultz, for example). The story still gets through, and you still understand that this is an issue of enormous gravity. But I reiterate my opinion that the play is much better.
    8gftbiloxi

    A Powerful Statement

    Matthew Shepard was about two months short of his twenty-second birth when he was robbed, beaten, tied to a fence post and left to die in a rural area of Wyoming. The man who found him at first thought he was a scarecrow. Rushed to Poudre Valley Hospital at Fort Collins, he died on 12 October 1998--and when Russell Henderson and Aaron McKinney were arrested for the crime they resorted to a defense known as "gay panic." Matthew Shepherd had propositioned them, they said, and they were so horrified that they killed him in response.

    The gay community and numerous civil rights watchdog groups were outraged by the defense, and as more and more facts came to light it seemed that the crime was somewhat more complicated than Henderson and McKinney wanted the public to know. Witnesses stated that Henderson and McKinney had specifically targeted Shepherd because he was gay. After much legal wrangling, Henderson pled guilty and testified against McKinney, who was convicted; after still more legal wrangling, and at the request of Shepherd's parents, McKinney escaped the death penalty but has no chance of parole.

    The case made headlines from end of the United States to the other and prompted numerous calls for Hate Crimes legislation, which had long been stalled both at the state and federal level. And in the midst of the confusion, chaos, and controversy, Moises Kaufman and the members of The Tectonic Theatre Project arrived on the scene, interviewing more than two hundred people about their thoughts and feelings on the case. These were shaped into THE LARAMIE PROJECT, a drama that debuted in 2000 and which has since shocked, impressed, and deeply moved audiences from coast to coast.

    On the stage, THE LARAMIE PROJECT is played by eight performers who enact the numerous interview subjects in a three act, three hour performance on a largely bare stage. When filmed by HBO in 2002, it was reduced in length by about half and each interview subject was performed by a different actor--some of them members of the Techtonic Theatre Project, some of them well-known actors such as Laura Linney and Peter Fonda. The result is indeed powerful... but not as effective as the stage version, for on film it tends be a series of readings by "talking heads," a sort of pseudo-documentary, rather than as a cohesive whole.

    That said, the great difference between the film and the original script is one of balance. On stage, THE LARAMIE PROJECT takes no sides per se; it simply sets forth the words and allows the audience to judge. On screen, it is distinctly slanted, cutting much of the commentary that gave the original such remarkable balance. Even so, and although far outstripped by the stage version, it is a powerful voice for equality, tolerance, and simple human decency. Recommended.

    GFT, Amazon Reviewer

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Members of the Tectonic company who originally conducted the interviews in Laramie are featured in the movie.
    • Quotes

      Dennis Shepard: My son, Matthew, did not look like a winner. He was rather uncoordinated and wore braces from the age of 13 until the day he died. However in his all-too-brief life, he proved that he was a winner. On October 6th 1998, he tried to show the world he could win again. On October 12th 1998, my first born son, and my hero, lost. On October 12th 1998, my first born son, and my hero, died. 50 days before his 22nd birthday. I keep wondering the same thing that I did when I first saw him in the hospital. What would he have become? How could he have changed his piece of the world to make it better? Matt officially died in a hospital in Fort Collins, Colorado. He actually died on the outskirts of Laramie, tied to a fence. You, Mr. McKinney, with your friend Mr. Henderson, left him there, by himself. But he was not alone. There were his lifelong friends with him, friends that he had grown up with. You're probably wondering who these friends were. First he had the beautiful night sky and the same stars and moon we used to see through a telescope. Then he had the daylight and the sun to shine on him. And through it all, he was breathing in the scent of the pine trees from the snowy range. He heard the wind, the ever present Wyoming wind for the last time. He had one more friend with him. He had God. And I feel better, knowing he wasn't alone. Matt's beating, hospitalization, and funeral focused worldwide attention on hate. Good is coming out of evil. People have said, 'Enough is enough.' I miss my son, but I am proud to be able to say that he was my son. Judy has been quoted as being against the death penalty. It has been stated that Matt was against the death penalty. Both of these statements are false. I, too, believe in the death penalty. I would like nothing better than to see you die, Mr. McKinney. However, this is the time to begin the healing process, to show mercy to someone who refused to show any mercy. Mr. McKinney, I am going to grant you life, as hard as it is to do so, because of Matthew. Everytime you celebrate Christmas, a birthday, the 4th of July, remember that Matt isn't. Everytime that you wake up in your prison cell, remember you had the opportunity and the ability to stop your actions that night. You robbed me of something very precious and I will never forgive you for that. Mr. McKinney, I give you life in the memory of someone who no longer lives. May you have a long life. And may you thank Matthew everyday for it.

    • Connections
      Featured in The 54th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards (2002)
    • Soundtracks
      Can't You See
      Written by Toy Caldwell Jr.

      Performed by The Marshall Tucker Band

      Courtesy of Spirit Music Group

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 9, 2002 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • hbo.com - videos, cast bios, photos
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Le projet Laramie
    • Filming locations
      • Golden, Colorado, USA
    • Production companies
      • Cane/Gabay Productions
      • Good Machine
      • Home Box Office (HBO)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 37m(97 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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