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The Weather Man

  • 2005
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 42m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
85K
YOUR RATING
Nicolas Cage in The Weather Man (2005)
Home Video Trailer from Paramount
Play trailer2:31
3 Videos
99+ Photos
Dark ComedyComedyDrama

A Chicago weatherman separated from his wife and children debates whether professional and personal success are mutually exclusive.A Chicago weatherman separated from his wife and children debates whether professional and personal success are mutually exclusive.A Chicago weatherman separated from his wife and children debates whether professional and personal success are mutually exclusive.

  • Director
    • Gore Verbinski
  • Writer
    • Steve Conrad
  • Stars
    • Nicolas Cage
    • Hope Davis
    • Nicholas Hoult
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    85K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Gore Verbinski
    • Writer
      • Steve Conrad
    • Stars
      • Nicolas Cage
      • Hope Davis
      • Nicholas Hoult
    • 343User reviews
    • 110Critic reviews
    • 61Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos3

    The Weather Man
    Trailer 2:31
    The Weather Man
    The Weather Man
    Trailer 2:31
    The Weather Man
    The Weather Man
    Trailer 2:31
    The Weather Man
    The Weather Man
    Trailer 2:31
    The Weather Man

    Photos101

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    + 95
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    Top cast90

    Edit
    Nicolas Cage
    Nicolas Cage
    • David Spritz
    Hope Davis
    Hope Davis
    • Noreen
    Nicholas Hoult
    Nicholas Hoult
    • Mike
    Michael Caine
    Michael Caine
    • Robert Spritzel
    Gemmenne de la Peña
    Gemmenne de la Peña
    • Shelly
    • (as Gemmenne De La Peña)
    Michael Rispoli
    Michael Rispoli
    • Russ
    Gil Bellows
    Gil Bellows
    • Don
    Judith McConnell
    Judith McConnell
    • Lauren
    Chris Marrs
    Chris Marrs
    • DMV Guy
    Dina Facklis
    • Andrea
    J. Nicole Brooks
    J. Nicole Brooks
    • Clerk
    • (as Deanna NJ Brooks)
    Sia A. Moody
    Sia A. Moody
    • Nurse
    • (as Sia Moody)
    Guy Van Swearingen
    Guy Van Swearingen
    • Nipper Guy
    Alexander Pine
    • Fast Food Employee
    • (as Alejandro Pina)
    Jackson Bubala
    • Fast Food Child
    Jennifer Bills
    • Fast Food Mom
    Peter Grosz
    Peter Grosz
    • Shelly's Archery Instructor
    Joe Bianchi
    • Paul
    • Director
      • Gore Verbinski
    • Writer
      • Steve Conrad
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews343

    6.585.1K
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    Featured reviews

    6claudio_carvalho

    A Weird and Pessimist View of the Contemporary American Way of Life

    In Chicago, Dave Spritz (Nicolas Cage) is the weatherman of the local TV news loved and loathed by the audiences. He is successful in his career making US$ 240,000.00 per year in spite of not having degree in meteorology. However, his personal life is a complete mess: he is a frustrated writer divorced from his wife Noreen (Hope Davis) but he still likes her and wishes to have her back and their marriage work; his sixteen year-old son Mike (Nicholas Hoult) is in rehabilitation for using pot; his clumsy and fat daughter Shelly (Gemmenne de la Peña) is constantly humiliated at school by her mates and pejoratively called "camel-toe"; his father Robert Spritzel (Michael Caine) is a distant perfectionist writer and Dave tries to prove his own value to him. When Dave is invited for a test in a national network in New York, his father informs that he has cancer. While trying to resolve his problems and frustrations, Dave grows-up and reaches the necessary maturity to manage the complexities of life.

    "The Weather Man" is a weird and pessimist view of the contemporary American Way of Life. The complex and contradictory lead character is capable of making lots of money just because he can perfectly sell his image to the public without having knowledge about what he is talking; inclusive he is frustrated, feels shallow and compares himself to a fast-food. But he is unsuccessful to have the right attitudes with his family in spite of his best efforts and needy to prove his father his own merits. However, the story is pointless and boring in some moments and in the end I found this movie only reasonable, but with a great potential not well explored by the director. My vote is six.

    Title (Brazil): "O Sol de Cada Manhã" ("The Sun of Each Morning")
    9taramascara2

    Excellent Social Commentary

    This movie was a great piece of social commentary on the emptiness of our current American culture. Being the weatherman appears to be a great job. It pays almost $300 Grand a year, and you can afford a nice apartment and a mansion for your beautiful blonde ex-wife and your two estranged children.

    A job as a weatherman, without a meteorological degree entails absolutely no challenges. You become lazy and bored, because you think you have everything. After all, isn't the entire purpose of life to make money, drive nice cars, and wear nice clothes, and eat out every night of the week? You are able to spoil your children, hence never teaching them the value of challenging themselves and depriving them of ever working toward a goal and feeling satisfied.

    This is what we think living is today in this country! We have no depth! We have toxic vocabulary, eat useless toxic food, we watch useless toxic entertainment, and we have completely useless jobs that create nothing. We wonder why our children have no idea what to do with themselves? Wealthy Americans, which most of us are by the standards of the world, have no skills, no integrity, and no character. The only things our children grow up knowing for sure, are what a Frosty is, and a Big Gulp. The gap between this generation and their grandparents is vast. Our elders worked hard at jobs which created the foundation of wealth and substance that we erode every day with our irresponsible selfish consumerist conduct. Mr. Spritz has no idea what a Big Gulp is, but he's dying of the cancer that eats this country.

    The Weatherman (Nicholas Cage) has a better time with himself, and everyone else as soon as he figures this out. Hilariously, he had to actually get hit in the head with a Big Gulp. We need to focus on the things that matter, take responsibility for our children, and ourselves. The one thing that I think was off in the movie was the line about how being an adult does not include the word easy. The big secret to life, is that when we do things the correct way, often the hard way, life actually gets easier, for everyone.

    I went to the theater expecting the usual vacuous Hollywood bomb. I was blown away with the power of this movie. On the way out, we asked a young man that was working the theater what he thought. He said that he thought The Weatherman was incredibly dark and very far fetched. I agree, our culture is dark and far fetched. The movie, however, was dead on. Our current life is a bubble about to burst. This movie offered a solution - find some meaning in your life and get after it. Pretending this vacuum doesn't exist, and that Jessica and Ashley Simpson are talented individuals worth our time and interest, is incredibly bleak to me. On the other hand, I was pretty sure this young man had no idea the scale of these problems. How could he, when he has never experienced anything else.
    8gradyharp

    As Unpredictable as the Weather

    Gore Verbinski (Pirates of the Caribbean X3, The Ring, The Mexican) has an uncanny way of moving strange characters through bizarre plots while maintaining our interest and our empathy. THE WEATHER MAN was so poorly promoted when it hit the theaters that it seemed like it was going to be one of those asinine food throwing slapstick comedies instead of the very serious examination of contemporary life in the big cities, or even more about the struggle of a disillusioned man who cannot find a balance between business success and family/marital failure, it is. This viewer almost ignored it completely - until the DVD.

    David Spritz (Nicholas Cage) is a TV pawn the station uses as a weatherman: he is untrained as a meteorologist, skilled only be his TV persona success dependent on a created gag/tag line - the Nipper (the peak worst day in the forecast). His personal life is a mess, separated from a disconsolate wife Noreen (Hope Davis), distanced from his successful writer father Robert (Michael Caine) and on shaky territory with his two children - fat and sad Sully (Gemmenne de la Peña) and sweet but troubled pothead Mike (Nicholas Hoult). To make life worse his TV persona follows him into the streets of blustery Chicago where his viewers either seek autographs invading his privacy or throw food at him as the progenitor of the lousy cold weather. This polarized existence is invaded by an offer to become weatherman on Bryan Gumbel's Hello America show in New York (a career jump for which he longs for many reasons), serial confrontations with his father whom he emulates but always feels a failure, the finding that his father has lymphoma, the ridicule of fat Shelly at school, Mike's edgy involvement with his drug counselor Don (Gil Bellows), and Noreen's new live-in Russ (Michael Rispoli). How David meanders through this quagmire of dilemmas is the story and while it is not pretty, it is pungent.

    Cage inhabits the strange role of David finding a way to make this loser with a short temper someone about whom we care. It is a tough assignment but Cage meets it on every level. Michael Caine provides some of the more eloquent moments in the film: his words of wisdom and view of life are the only grounded elements of the story. Likewise Hope Davis is fine as are the cameo roles of the children as sensitively played by de la Peña and Hoult. The subject of the film is tough and the excessive use of potty mouth language is overbearing and at times one wishes Verbinski would have edited some of the gross food slinging scenes.

    But as an overall message movie there is much here to admire. It simply is not the mindless slapstick the posters and trailers would indicate. The PR folks on this one blew it. Worth your time and attention. Grady Harp
    9maxwellsmart

    Alternately hilarious and dark, with misleading marketing

    When I first saw the advertisements for "The Weather Man", it seemed like the movie was going to be another formulaic, feel good Hollywood redemption tale. In reality, it is a dark, scathing satire of American values. The marketing likely scared away a lot of people who would enjoy the film, while attracting an audience who was presented with something unexpected and perhaps uncomfortable. The comedy is quite raunchy, the tone is bleak, and the story is anything but formulaic, throwing industry conventions right out the window, which leads to a film that's more believable than most.

    David Spritz is a man whose life has become the ultimate exercise in futility. Each day, he wakes up and goes to a job that, despite paying a handsome salary, is entirely unfulfilling. His relationship with his ex-wife is strained, his relationship with his children distant. To make things worse, his Pulitzer Prize winning father seems to be disappointed in what David has done with his life.

    In real life, progress in one's personal life is generally made in baby steps. Usually, people don't undergo a drastic transformation over the course of several months. David attempts to improve his standing in life, at times failing entirely, at times succeeding in small doses. The results of these attempts range from very funny to downright saddening, and this helps lend the film an air of realism. This is a complicated character study about a man coming to grips with the fact that he's failed to meet any of the goals he set for himself in life, despite attaining a social standing that many people are envious of. There aren't any easy answers or life altering epiphanies; self-improvement is a long, gradual task that will probably never be completely fulfilled, and "The Weather Man" reflects this reality. While not for all tastes, this movie deserves credit for tackling a relatively conventional subject in a very unconventional, at least for a mainstream Hollywood movie, manner. I imagine that this film will be a bigger success overseas and on DVD than it will be in its US theatrical run.
    7ferguson-6

    Not a Hill of Beans

    Greetings again from the darkness. So Close. This is painfully close to being a great film. Although still very good at presenting issues normally not seen on film, director Gore Verbinski ("Pirates of the Caribbean" "The Ring") falls just short of making a very powerful statement.

    Please do not let the trailer fool you. This is not slapstick comedy like "Anchorman". This is deep, often dark subject matter addressing the emotional struggles men face when dealing with a bad divorce, trying to maintain a relationship with kids, and the pressures of trying to make one's own dad proud (or at least gain acceptance). So often Hollywood deals with the plight of the woman and her emotional turmoil. Instead we are "treated" with watching a man's attempt to live up to (what he thinks are) expectations of others and how somehow the right job will make everything OK ... his life will be whole.

    Nicolas Cage gives another outstanding performance as "The Weather Man" on a Chicago TV station. To add to the complexity, he is not a meteorologist and he is being courted by a national morning talk show featuring Bryant Gumbel. Two areas with this character are poorly written in my opinion. First, Cage's hair weave is bloody awful. At least in Dallas, weather men all look like Televangelists with perfect hair. His is always askew ... don't they have hair/make-up staff in Chicago? Second, the character is written as too much of a loser in all aspects. He is not just struggling, he is not someone any guy or girl would want to hang with. The film tries, but fails, to show the "switch" come on when Cage steps in front of the camera. They tell us this happens, but it needed to be presented much clearer.

    Playing Cage's father, Michael Caine is a pretty intimidating figure as he is confused about his son's direction in life while at the same time facing a very dark future of his own. Caine is wonderful in the role and when he tells his son "Sometimes in life, you just have to chuck it", we really get it and hope that Cage does as well.

    On the other hand, Hope Davis is cast as yet another frigid "B" yuppie whom I don't understand how any man could be attracted to. Yet somehow this is the woman Cage wants back. Time to stretch your talent a bit Hope. You showed plenty of promise in "About Schmidt" and have been working steadily since. But to take the next step as an actress, you need to try a new character. Gil Bellows ("Aly McBeal") has a creepy role as Cage's teenage son's counselor. He is responsible for some of the most uncomfortable moments as well as a way for Cage to finally cut loose.

    As I said, this is a very good movie that falls just short of greatness. While providing insight into the male psyche, it fails to deliver the message or solution it seemed to be leading up to. However, it is nice to see a man portrayed as something other than a superhero, adulterer, international spy or Olympic caliber lover.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The "plastic" spoon stuck to Nicolas Cage's lapel was actually a metal spoon that had been painted to appear plastic and which was held in place with a magnet.
    • Goofs
      When David enters the bathroom and rinses, the mirror reveals that his watch is undone and hanging around his wrist. In the next shot, from a different angle, his watch is done up.
    • Quotes

      Dave Spritz: I remember once imagining what my life would be like, what I'd be like. I pictured having all these qualities, strong positive qualities that people could pick up on from across the room. But as time passed, few ever became any qualities that I actually had. And all the possibilities I faced and the sorts of people I could be, all of them got reduced every year to fewer and fewer. Until finally they got reduced to one, to who I am. And that's who I am, the weather man.

    • Connections
      Featured in Atmospheric Pressure: The Style and Palette (2006)
    • Soundtracks
      The Passenger
      (1977)

      Written by Iggy Pop & Ricky Gardiner

      Performed by Iggy Pop

      Courtesy of Virgin Records

      Under license from EMI Film & Television Music

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    FAQ18

    • How long is The Weather Man?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 30, 2005 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • Germany
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • El sol de cada mañana
    • Filming locations
      • Glisson Archery & Pro Shop, 22900 E Main St, Plainfield, IL, USA(Archery Range)
    • Production companies
      • Paramount Pictures
      • Escape Artists
      • Kumar Mobiliengesellschaft mbH & Co. Projekt Nr. 2 KG
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $22,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $12,482,775
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $4,248,465
      • Oct 30, 2005
    • Gross worldwide
      • $19,126,398
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 42 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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