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The Stone Angel

  • 2007
  • R
  • 1h 55m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
1.9K
YOUR RATING
The Stone Angel (2007)
This is the theatrical trailer for The Stone Angel, directed by Kari Skogland.
Play trailer2:04
1 Video
18 Photos
Drama

A 90-year-old woman, rapidly losing her memory and knowing that sooner or later her life will be over, returns to the Manitoba farmhouse she grew up in to try and make peace with her dysfunc... Read allA 90-year-old woman, rapidly losing her memory and knowing that sooner or later her life will be over, returns to the Manitoba farmhouse she grew up in to try and make peace with her dysfunctional family.A 90-year-old woman, rapidly losing her memory and knowing that sooner or later her life will be over, returns to the Manitoba farmhouse she grew up in to try and make peace with her dysfunctional family.

  • Director
    • Kari Skogland
  • Writers
    • Kari Skogland
    • Margaret Laurence
  • Stars
    • Ellen Burstyn
    • Christine Horne
    • Elliot Page
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    1.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Kari Skogland
    • Writers
      • Kari Skogland
      • Margaret Laurence
    • Stars
      • Ellen Burstyn
      • Christine Horne
      • Elliot Page
    • 20User reviews
    • 23Critic reviews
    • 57Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins & 9 nominations total

    Videos1

    The Stone Angel: Theatrical Trailer
    Trailer 2:04
    The Stone Angel: Theatrical Trailer

    Photos17

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    Top cast51

    Edit
    Ellen Burstyn
    Ellen Burstyn
    • Hagar
    Christine Horne
    Christine Horne
    • Young Hagar
    Elliot Page
    Elliot Page
    • Arlene
    • (as Ellen Page)
    Dylan Baker
    Dylan Baker
    • Marvin
    Sheila McCarthy
    Sheila McCarthy
    • Doris
    Judy Marshak
    Judy Marshak
    • Silver Elms Matron
    Doreen Brownstone
    • Silver Elms Bridge Player
    Samantha Weinstein
    Samantha Weinstein
    • Child Hagar
    Ryland Thiessen
    • Child Telford
    Mackenzie Munro
    Mackenzie Munro
    • Child Charlotte
    Connor Price
    Connor Price
    • Child Matt
    Jordan Todosey
    Jordan Todosey
    • Child Lottie
    Ardith Boxall
    • Lottie's Mother
    Arne MacPherson
    Arne MacPherson
    • Doctor
    Ted Atherton
    Ted Atherton
    • Reverend Troy
    R. Morgan Slade
    • Young Telford
    Hilary Carroll
    • Bank Teller
    Olie Alto
    • Bus Driver
    • Director
      • Kari Skogland
    • Writers
      • Kari Skogland
      • Margaret Laurence
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews20

    6.11.8K
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    Featured reviews

    9Bean-24

    I was so moved by this picture.

    I was very moved by the story and because I am going through something similar with my own parents, I really connected. It is so easy to forget that someone whose body is failing was once vibrant and passionate. And then there's the mistakes they made and have to live with. I loved Ellen Burstyn's performance and who is Christine Horne? She's fantastic! A real find. There is probably the most erotic scene I've ever seen in a film, yet nothing was shown - it was just so beautifully done. Overall the look and feel of the film was stunning, a real emotional journey. Cole Hauser is very very good in this picture, he humanizes a man spiraling downwards. I liked the way the filmmaker approached this woman's life, never sentimental, never too much - just enough to hook us in, but not enough to bog down.
    8boyeilela

    So true to the novel

    What I loved about the on-screen adaptation of The Stone Angel is that it stayed so true to the novel! Great film! As an avid reader, I find the worst thing about film adaptations is that the book somehow gets lost in translation. You can tell the Stone Angel team was careful not to let this happen with this film.

    Ellen Burstyn was an excellent casting choice for the role of Hagar and she is definitely a movie superstar. However, I think the Canadian actress (Christine Horne) chosen to play Hagar in her younger years also did an incredible job that warrants great praise. I haven't seen any of Horne's previous work but I will definitely seek it out after seeing her Stone Angel performance.

    I heard the Canadian theatrical release of The Stone Angel is going to happen in Spring or Summer 2008. I can't wait to see it on the big screen again!
    9laurafeeleus

    Excellent

    I saw this film in Winnipeg recently - appropriate, given the location used. I first read Lawrence's book back in the 70's and for me, it's always been a very powerful picture of the trials of aging in our society. It resonated when I was young, and it resonates even more now. When the film came out, I was keen to see if the story could survive. and was thoroughly impressed, especially with Ellen Burstyn's performance. She manages to give us a complete human being, even though the character is generally cranky and judgmental - someone that you wouldn't want to live with. It's great to be able to see favourite characters come to life so authentically.
    7howard.schumann

    Never fully develops its characters

    In Canadian director Kari Skogland's film adaptation of the Margaret Laurence novel The Stone Angel Ellen Burstyn is Hagar Shipley, a proud and cantankerous woman approaching her nineties who wishes to remain independent until the very end, stubbornly refusing to be placed in a nursing home by her well-meaning son Marvin. Filmed in Manitoba, Canada and set in the fictional town of Manawaka, The Stone Angel is a straightforward and conventional interpretation of the book that has been required reading in Canadian high school English classes for almost half a century.

    The title of the film comes from the stone statue erected on Hagar's mother's grave which serves as a metaphor for Hagar's inability to express emotion during her tumultuous lifetime. Burstyn brings vulnerability and humor to the role but is a bit too likable to fully realize the ego-driven, self-defeating character who managed to alienate her wealthy father, her well-meaning but alcoholic husband, and both of her sons. As she nears the end of her days, she reflects that "pride was my wilderness and the demon that led me there was fear. I was alone, never anything else, and never free, for I carried my chains within me, and they spread out from me and shackled all I touched".

    Confronting having to spend her last days in a nursing home, Hagar looks back at her life and looks at her failed relationships, her recollections shown in flashbacks without voice-over narration. The story begins with a dance that she attended as a young girl. Chaperoned by her Aunt Dolly, she meets her future husband, the previously married Bram Shipley (Cole/Wings Hauser), a poor farmer whose reputation in the town is sullied because of his association with the Native American population. The young Hagar is played by Christine Horne who is exceptional in her first feature role. Despite Hagar's pleading, her relationship with Bram is rejected by her cold and rigid father whose refusal to attend the wedding starts the marriage off on the wrong foot. This is exacerbated by his leaving all of his money to the town of Manawaka, condemning the young couple to a life of poverty.

    Going through the motions of her marriage to Bram, Hagar withdraws from social activities to prevent being rejected by the town's upper classes. When she produces two sons, Marvin (Dylan Baker) and John (Kevin Zegers), she is unable to give them the love that they need. "Every joy I might have held in my man or any child of mine or even the plain light of morning", she reflects, "all were forced to a standstill by some break of proper appearances…When did I ever speak the heart's truth?" Like the biblical Hagar who fled to the desert because she could not tolerate further affronts to her pride, Hagar leaves Manawaka to live in Ontario but eventually returns to the Shipley farm.

    As the scene shifts back to the present, Hagar runs away to an abandoned house near the ocean that she remembers from her childhood to escape from being placed in a nursing home by Marvin and his wife Doris (Sheila McCarthy), Here she meets a young man named Leo (Luke Kirby) who takes an interest in her and compels her to look at and take responsibility for the mistakes she made in her life. The Stone Angel pulls out all the emotional stops but never fully develops its characters to the point where I felt any stake in the story's outcome, although the spirited performance by Ellen Page as John's devoted but naive girlfriend and the moving final scenes bring a new energy to the film's second half.
    6wisewebwoman

    Margaret Laurence would not be happy.

    As this film does not do justice to a great novel. I so loved this book I've read it twice. It presents an irascible old woman, warts and all, bad tempered and humourless, and tries to soften her up and give her a raison d'etre.

    Hagar, played by the marvellous Ellen Burstyn, is a woman who lives in fear of what her son and anxious daughter in law can do to her. The worst would be a home for the aged and it is happening now.

    Through flashbacks, we gain insight into Hagar's life, her lusty marriage to a waster, her sons and her bitterness at the way life has worked out for her.

    It is hopelessly and meaninglessly modernized, the book was written in the sixties and here it is translated to modern day with cell phones, etc. It doesn't work. The flashbacks are not smoothly transitioned and at times are oddly placed within the framework of the whole or are too abrupt.

    However, that said, the supporting cast are excellent with the younger lusty Hagar played by Christine Horne is a delight. Ellen Page has a small but telling part.

    But the film didn't enhance my enjoyment of the book.

    6 out of 10.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      During filming, Ellen Burstyn saw on the call sheet a long lost relative who was working on the crew.
    • Goofs
      The first incident with the freight train is set about 1950 yet it has no caboose. The caboose was not replaced by an electronic monitor on the last freight car until the eighties. It's also more than likely that in that era in western Canada a freight would have been hauled by steam rather than diesel.
    • Quotes

      Arlene: I want to have a baby.

      John: We're broke.

      Arlene: We love each other. It'll be a love child.

      [they both laugh quietly. meanwhile, Hagar walks silently in and sees what's going on]

      John: Well, my mom leaves town in a couple weeks. Then we can get married, and we can talk about having a baby, okay?

      Arlene: I don't care about a wedding or anything.

      John: You can have whatever you want.

      [it becomes more intense; they are both breathing faster]

      Arlene: [breathlessly] I want lots of babies.

      [then they start having sex and Hagar leaves, having said nothing]

    • Soundtracks
      Manakwa Stomp
      Written by Daniel Koulack

      Performed by The Prairie Polka Playboys

      (performed at dance)

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 9, 2008 (Canada)
    • Countries of origin
      • Canada
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • El ángel de piedra
    • Filming locations
      • Hartney, Manitoba, Canada
    • Production companies
      • Alliance
      • Astral Media
      • Buffalo Gal Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $459,166
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $31,883
      • Jul 13, 2008
    • Gross worldwide
      • $473,993
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 55m(115 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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