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IMDbPro

Winter Solstice

  • 2004
  • R
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
6.0/10
1.5K
YOUR RATING
Anthony LaPaglia, Allison Janney, and Ron Livingston in Winter Solstice (2004)
Home Video Trailer from Paramount Home Entertainment
Play trailer2:06
1 Video
4 Photos
Drama

In this suburban drama, a widower confronts his older son's decision to leave home and his younger son's self-destructive behavior.In this suburban drama, a widower confronts his older son's decision to leave home and his younger son's self-destructive behavior.In this suburban drama, a widower confronts his older son's decision to leave home and his younger son's self-destructive behavior.

  • Director
    • Josh Sternfeld
  • Writer
    • Josh Sternfeld
  • Stars
    • Anthony LaPaglia
    • Aaron Stanford
    • Mark Webber
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.0/10
    1.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Josh Sternfeld
    • Writer
      • Josh Sternfeld
    • Stars
      • Anthony LaPaglia
      • Aaron Stanford
      • Mark Webber
    • 29User reviews
    • 42Critic reviews
    • 59Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    Winter Solstice
    Trailer 2:06
    Winter Solstice

    Photos3

    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster

    Top cast20

    Edit
    Anthony LaPaglia
    Anthony LaPaglia
    • Jim Winters
    Aaron Stanford
    Aaron Stanford
    • Gabe Winters
    Mark Webber
    Mark Webber
    • Pete Winters
    Allison Janney
    Allison Janney
    • Molly Ripkin
    Michelle Monaghan
    Michelle Monaghan
    • Stacey
    Brendan Sexton III
    Brendan Sexton III
    • Robbie
    • (as Brendan Sexton)
    Ron Livingston
    Ron Livingston
    • Mr. Bricker
    Ebon Moss-Bachrach
    Ebon Moss-Bachrach
    • Steve
    Frank Wood
    Frank Wood
    • Bill Brennan
    Kel O'Neill
    Kel O'Neill
    • Tim
    Thomas Sadoski
    Thomas Sadoski
    • Chris Bender
    Kathleen Bridget Kelly
    • Mrs. Burton
    • (as Kathleen Kelly)
    Welker White
    Welker White
    • History Teacher
    Jason Fuchs
    Jason Fuchs
    • Bob
    Dana Segal
    Dana Segal
    • Math Teacher
    Lars Engstrom
    Lars Engstrom
    • Andrew
    Rocco Rosanio
    Rocco Rosanio
    • Pete's Friend #1
    Tim Dowlin
    Tim Dowlin
    • Pete's Friend #2
    • Director
      • Josh Sternfeld
    • Writer
      • Josh Sternfeld
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews29

    6.01.5K
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    Featured reviews

    DigitalNemesis

    Passionate acting with great restraint

    I went to see Winter Solstice in the Vancouver Film Festival this evening and was very surprised at the subtlety and restraint used by the director to ensure the film was emotional with over acting. It is a very peaceful film that explores the parents view of children leaving home as opposed to the child's view. A tremendous cast and great performances from Anthony LaPaglia and Mark Webber. Also a brief appearance from Ron Livingston in which he always has a way stealing scenes as the most likable guy in a room.

    Very impressive little film with beautiful scenery of New Jersey, tremendous cast and an appealing change to cinema that is more than overwhelmed with actors who love to hear themselves speak.
    6noralee

    Sweet Meditation on A Family of Guys Without A Mother

    "Winter Solstice" is a quiet, almost all-male counterpart to "Imaginary Heroes," dealing with the same theme of family grief, and was even filmed in the same town of Glen Ridge, NJ.

    Debut writer/director Josh Sternfeld perfectly captures the inarticulatelessness of working class guys, particularly in father/son and brother/brother interactions.

    Anthony LaPaglia as the landscaper dad and Aaron Stanford as his restless older son add to the minimal script with on screen charisma. It's sweetly charming how absolutely clueless they are in their lack of communication with the women who are attracted to them, but Allison Janney and Michelle Monaghan are overly understanding minor characters in their intersections with the dad and older son, respectively. I presume this is to emphasize the hole in their lives caused by the absence of the mother.

    The problem is that without either more intervention by the women or the alcoholic violence of Sam Shephard's male family explorations, authentic looking and sounding guys hanging out together don't do very much or resolve issues. Pretty much the only plot point is the older son's gradual decision to leave --though I was surprised he has LPs to pack up--and how the other characters react to that.

    It was nice to see Brendan Sexton again, more filled out, but he looked distractingly like the younger son played by Mark Webber so that I was confused at first that he was the best friend not the brother.

    John Leventhal's intricate guitar playing on his original score is almost distractingly good. The song selections are beautiful sounding, though not particularly illustrative.
    gradyharp

    Solstice - The Longest or the Shortest Day : Pausing as a Voyeur in the Life of a Fractured Family

    Josh Sternfeld has done the unthinkable. He has elected to tell a story merely by allowing the viewer to overhear the minimal dialogue of the characters without supplying a linear plot or explanation of how a little family fell apart.

    Landscaper Jim Winters (Anthony LaPaglia is a brilliant role) is the single father of two sons - Gabe (Aaron Stanford) who is the older and looking for ways to move away from his boring little small town home to find breathing space in Florida, and Pete (Mark Webber) a confused kid who wears a hearing aide and only sporadically seems to tune in to life and school. The three men live a fairly orderly life since the death 5 years ago of the wife/mother in a car accident which Pete survived. Jim tries to maintain some semblance of family but just cannot quite step out of his ill-defined grief to get a perspective on life. Obviously some forces of change are needed to heal this family of men.

    Into the neighborhood moves Molly Ripkin (Allison Janney) who is house sitting for friends while she breaks away from being a paralegal to try her hand at making unique jewelry. She connects with Jim, tries to connect with his sons, but at the least she introduces a figure of gentle concern and focused presence. Pete finds some understanding from a summer school teacher (Ron Livingston) and begins to see some concept of meaning to his life. Gabe's decision to leave for Florida's promise of better life means he also must say goodbye to his only rock of realism - his girlfriend Stacey (Michelle Monaghan). With all of these elements of change in the air the story just ends. What will happen now is left to us to decide.

    Yes, the film is slow moving, relying on minimal dialogue and more on silences and gazes. But Sternfeld opens this little family drama in such a tender way that we find ourselves wholly committed to the plight of each character. He makes us care. And that is the true beauty of minimalist art in film-making. The acting is first rate, with LaPaglia and Janney giving performances that deserve attention come awards time. Highly recommended for those who appreciate quiet sensitive films. Grady Harp
    7george.schmidt

    Echoes of "Ordinary People" - LaPaglia shines

    WINTER SOLSTICE (2005) *** Anthony LaPaglia, Aaron Stanford, Mark Webber, Allison Janney, Ron Livingston, Michelle Monaghan, Brendan Sexton III, Ebon Moss-Bachrach. (Dir: Josh Sternfeld)

    Echoes of "Ordinary People" and a first-writer's novella.

    Anthony LaPaglia is an excellent actor whose talents have been lately on the small screen in the TV crime drama CBS hit "Without A Trace" but on screen it's been awhile since he's had the chance to shine and in his latest film his talents are on full display.

    LaPaglia plays Jim Winters, a recently widowed father of two teenagers, attempting to hold things together including his moderately successful landscaping business in the lush suburbia of New Jersey. After the car crash that killed his beloved wife and the apparent glue to his brood the Winters family has been in a state of flux with his eldest son Gabe (Stanford) restless to break free from his dead-end job at a restaurant and his youngest son Pete (Webber) is aimlessly attempting to rebel by being a chronic late-to-riser and winding up in summer school much to their chagrin. All the while Jim has kept his grief to himself and apparently blaming himself.

    Enter Molly Ripkin (Janney of NBC's "The West Wing") a newcomer who enters the picture as a neighbor's house sitter who breaks Jim's cloud by moving in a few doors down enlisting Jim to help her move in and by returning the favor invites him and his boys to a dinner. Jim is naturally awkward and still trying to heal his new wounds but sees some salvation in this sudden change of events but still must deal with his head-strong sons when Gabe announces he's saved enough money to drive down south to stay with a friend in Florida, even leaving his girlfriend Stacey (Liv Tyler look-alike Monghan) behind.

    Novice filmmaker Sternfeld (making his directorial debut) – who also wrote the screenplay – tiptoes around the familiar angst in suburbia route that "Ordinary People" furrowed 25 years ago but shrewdly makes this more of a character study than a soap opera melodrama; the film feels like a first time writer's early novella. His casting of LaPaglia anchors the film with an implosive anger and rising feel of uncertainty yet doesn't rely on pyrotechnique of the human emotions that often blister what is lurking under the surface of complacency: fear and anger. LaPaglia has a few nice moments where the emotions are bubbling (I especially liked his encounter at a teacher/parent meeting where he almost bursts out in barely restrained ire) and tries to find his footing when Janney enters the picture; he clearly wants to move on but is plagued by his own hatred of himself which is subtle yet on display with his interactions with his sons.

    The acting is fine – Janney is a drink of ice water in an arid story of sadness and dislocation; Stanford and Webber have a good feel for their characters as not atypical teens and Livingston has some fun as the summer school teacher who seems as bored as his charges with ancient history.

    The only problem overall is the pacing seems a bit off and is arguably too low-key prompting the viewer to expect a fireworks display of feelings to come skyrocketing out of nowhere but this is not what Sternfeld has in mind and yet the stillness works. As does the rustic guitar-playing acoustic score by John Leventhal.

    A nice little indie film with some assured acting and interactions that often are overlooked in the multiplexes, even in the wilds of Jersey. Trust me, I had to venture to the jungles of Manhattan to catch this gem.
    7Howlin Wolf

    As the seasons change, you try to come to terms...

    Quick physics analogy here. (although I hate the discipline!) Imagine a family consisting of three forces pulling in opposite directions. What's gonna happen? Whatever exists between them is gonna start to show cracks, right? Well, even if this little scientific postulation of mine turns out to be incorrect, it still handily applies to the meditation on grief that "Winter Solstice" offers. If they were united as a group, they would be much stronger, but with the huge space vacated by a missing figure, they become a ship without a rudder.

    Fans, like me, of Lapaglia, Stanford or David Gordon Green's "All the Real Girls" should definitely come away from this with some food for thought. There are echoes of "In the Bedroom", too. Admirers of any mentioned will be pleasantly acquainted with the pace this film moves at as this is not a work for those who like their cinema to run loud, obvious and at a mile a minute. If low-key indie musing is your thing though, then I would suggest you check it out. It's content not to milk its material for moments of angst, so there are few showy moments for the actors. Suppressed anger is the main vent for hidden depths, so it could have been more 'raw', but taken together it nevertheless builds to something that is genuinely affecting.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Goofs
      In Peter's math class, his teacher says that the students will need to know the quadratic formula to pass the regents exam. Regents exams are only given in New York State, and not in New Jersey, where the film is set.
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Sahara/Eros/Kung Fu Hustle/Winter Solstice/Mondovino (2005)
    • Soundtracks
      The Rookie Year
      (2002)

      Written by Myk Porter, Matt Traxler, John Sayre and Jared Jolley

      Performed by Brandtson (as Brandston)

      Published by Bookhouse Boys Music (SESAC)

      Courtesy of Deep Elm Records, Inc.

      By Arrangement with Crusty Old Timer, Inc.

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    FAQ

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 24, 2005 (Australia)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • En uzun gece
    • Filming locations
      • Glen Ridge, New Jersey, USA
    • Production company
      • Sound Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $319,355
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $20,393
      • Apr 10, 2005
    • Gross worldwide
      • $355,879
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 30 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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