The summer before college Auden meets the mysterious Eli, a fellow insomniac. While the seaside town of Colby sleeps, the two embark on a nightly quest to help Auden experience the fun, care... Read allThe summer before college Auden meets the mysterious Eli, a fellow insomniac. While the seaside town of Colby sleeps, the two embark on a nightly quest to help Auden experience the fun, carefree teen life she never knew she wanted.The summer before college Auden meets the mysterious Eli, a fellow insomniac. While the seaside town of Colby sleeps, the two embark on a nightly quest to help Auden experience the fun, carefree teen life she never knew she wanted.
- Awards
- 1 win & 1 nomination total
David S. Bridson
- Clyde
- (as David Bridson)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
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Featured reviews
I definitely agree with the majority of reviewers who are giving this between a 6 and a 7. The storyline had the potential to be so much more but in general it, and the actors. Always fell a little flat to me. I gave it a 7 because I managed to get through it until the end, but I was never moved in the way I would like to be when watching a movie, and honestly, I could have just as easily given in a 6. So much could have been developed more - family dynamics, relationships, friendships. In short, watch this if you have nothing else to watch and you will probably feel a bit meh throughout. It was entirely surface and superficial.
Was it predictable? Yes. Was it simple? Yes. But I wasn't able to stop smiling through the whole film because it was so dang cute. Even though it was as I expected it to be, it was comforting. And definitely not the cheesiest young adult rom com, which is a huge plus.
A holiday teen-romance coming-of-age movie centering on Auden (Emma Pasarow), a socially-awkward people-watcher who dreams of being somebody else. She moves to her father's home by the sea for summer and meets his new trophy wife and baby. While there she meets Eli (Belmont Cameli), a freewheeling spirit and polar opposite to Auden.
A furball of tropes then, yet despite that the setup is well done and shows promise. The cinematography is excellent, overarchingly pastel with some beautiful shots, particularly the color coordination choices. Synthpop music also supports the narrative and seaside theme.
Inevitably this is a derivative story, loosely based on all other young romantic fiction, and that begins to show through. The key criticism is the lack of chemistry between the two protagonists. Naturally that shatters the core love story; add to that the generic and formulaic plot, it rapidly becomes easy to predict and its charm fades.
An ok romantic movie to pass the time, do not expect to be wowed by it.
A furball of tropes then, yet despite that the setup is well done and shows promise. The cinematography is excellent, overarchingly pastel with some beautiful shots, particularly the color coordination choices. Synthpop music also supports the narrative and seaside theme.
Inevitably this is a derivative story, loosely based on all other young romantic fiction, and that begins to show through. The key criticism is the lack of chemistry between the two protagonists. Naturally that shatters the core love story; add to that the generic and formulaic plot, it rapidly becomes easy to predict and its charm fades.
An ok romantic movie to pass the time, do not expect to be wowed by it.
Enjoyed this a lot. Believable characters, believable scenarios, nice locations. Of course few of us are as physically attractive as the characters, and a film exploring what happens to those not quite so blessed would be interesting, But this is film/fairy tale territory, so I guess that's unlikely to happen.
"Teen goes to the beach town of 'the other parent' to learn who they really are" is a pretty standard movie set-up. Maybe the book the movie is based on has elements from the real life of its author so the trope is less stereotypical and more biographical. Regardless, I think my only harsh critique is in the casting of Andie McDowell & Dermot Mulroney as parents of an 18 year-old only child, when they both have a full head of gray hair and are clearly well past or pushing 60. Both talented legendary actors, but time for them to accept that that parental roles are behind them now. Other than that it's a perfectly watchable coming of age story where the quiet kid finally learns to speak up and figure out where they want to go in life.
Did you know
- TriviaAuden is named after poet W. H. Auden, whose poem "Stop All the Clocks" (also known as Funeral Blues) was recited in the film Four Weddings and a Funeral, which starred Andie MacDowell, who plays Auden's mother in Along For the Ride.
- SoundtracksTo the East
Written by Mia Clarke, Emma Gaze, Rosamund Jean Murray, Verity Susman
Performed by Electrelane
Courtesy of Too Pure Records Ltd.
By arrangement with Beggars Group Media Limited
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
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- Also known as
- Déjate llevar
- Filming locations
- Wilmington, North Carolina, USA(location)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 46m(106 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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