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IMDbPro

Where the Road Meets the Sun

  • 2011
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 33m
IMDb RATING
5.7/10
307
YOUR RATING
Where the Road Meets the Sun (2011)
A drama centered on a man dealing with the aftereffects of being in a coma caused by a car accident.
Play trailer1:56
2 Videos
4 Photos
CrimeDrama

A drama centered on a man dealing with the aftereffects of being in a coma caused by a car accident.A drama centered on a man dealing with the aftereffects of being in a coma caused by a car accident.A drama centered on a man dealing with the aftereffects of being in a coma caused by a car accident.

  • Director
    • Mun Chee Yong
  • Writer
    • Mun Chee Yong
  • Stars
    • Eric Mabius
    • Will Yun Lee
    • Fernando Noriega
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.7/10
    307
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Mun Chee Yong
    • Writer
      • Mun Chee Yong
    • Stars
      • Eric Mabius
      • Will Yun Lee
      • Fernando Noriega
    • 6User reviews
    • 16Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 5 wins total

    Videos2

    Trailer #1
    Trailer 1:56
    Trailer #1
    Where The Road Meets The Sun: Clip 1
    Clip 1:39
    Where The Road Meets The Sun: Clip 1
    Where The Road Meets The Sun: Clip 1
    Clip 1:39
    Where The Road Meets The Sun: Clip 1

    Photos3

    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster

    Top cast62

    Edit
    Eric Mabius
    Eric Mabius
    • Blake
    Will Yun Lee
    Will Yun Lee
    • Takashi
    Fernando Noriega
    Fernando Noriega
    • Julio
    Luke Brandon Field
    Luke Brandon Field
    • Guy
    Laura Ramsey
    Laura Ramsey
    • Sandra
    Elsa Pataky
    Elsa Pataky
    • Michelle
    Emmanuelle Vaugier
    Emmanuelle Vaugier
    • Lisa
    Jesse Garcia
    Jesse Garcia
    • Jose
    Boris Lee Krutonog
    Boris Lee Krutonog
    • Raffi
    Erick Avari
    Erick Avari
    • Dadi
    Manuk Aret
    Manuk Aret
    • Toma
    Lina Esco
    Lina Esco
    • Natasha
    Todd Leigh
    Todd Leigh
    • Chris
    Leslie Garza
    Leslie Garza
    • Mom
    Kazumi Aihara
    Kazumi Aihara
    • Girlfriend
    Euriamis Losada
    Euriamis Losada
    • Spikey
    Amit Shah
    • Restaurant Patron
    Akiko Shima
    Akiko Shima
    • Nurse
    • Director
      • Mun Chee Yong
    • Writer
      • Mun Chee Yong
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews6

    5.7307
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    Featured reviews

    7EddiesFathersSon

    Wonderful Character Study

    I surprised myself by liking this film so much. It follows 4 flawed and likable men from the late 90's through the mid 00's. The stories seem disjointed at first, and are, but Yong Mun Chee adeptly brings the 4 main characters together. I found the setting of a residential hotel very believable like many I've seen. I believe this was the first time I've seen such a diverse group of so well portrayed. The acting is excellent, including supporting characters. I was particularly struck by how the film used remembrances of 9-11 as a mechanism to link the 4 main characters. I became invested in the lives of all 4 and wanted them to find what they needed.
    JohnTEQP

    Lyrical character study

    This is a very lyrical film, a character study with very good performances. As it introduces us to the four main characters, it starts out in several locations, and the connections between them are not obvious. Bear with the disjointed structure, however, because the vignettes are strong. The four guys are all flawed, some more so than others. The most apparently sympathetic character is the Mexican busboy who just wants to send money home to his family, and always seems to be smiling. His friendship with the British playboy doesn't seem to make sense, until you realize that they're both fairly mischievous; one just has more permission to be so than the other. The two slightly older guys both seem burned and despondent beyond repair, but each of them also desperately wants to believe in something again, and that something is love.
    8DICK STEEL

    A Nutshell Review: Where the Road Meets the Sun

    There are a number of Singaporean filmmakers who have stretched their wings and gone out there in the world to make their films, from documentarians such as Lynn Lee, James Leong and Tan Siok Siok with her upcoming film Twittamentary, and others such as Pearry Reginald Teo and Jonathan Lim. with the world being their oyster and playground. The cinematic road brings writer-director Yong Mun Chee back to Singapore with her debut feature Where the Road Meets the Sun having premiered in the USA a few weeks ago, before making it back here to premiere it during the ScreenSingapore event.

    There could have been slight ruffling of the feathers for Singapore Night given the showcase of two films that weren't made by any of the regular established names in the local film community, but after watching both films, I thought this could spur the entire community forward to realize that we have talent both within and outside our shores, some already establishing a beachhead overseas that perhaps could become springboards for others to follow. Idealistic, but worth a shot in my opinion.

    Mun Chee's film tells the story of immigrants in the cosmopolitan city of Los Angeles, which in a way reflects both the reality of the city's make up as well as tapping onto Mun Chee's own real world experience of someone from the outside looking in. This is a character driven narrative in a slice of life fashion that snapshots a moment of confluence, but not before a rather long winded introduction that spanned a fast forward of months to introduce characters from various countries.

    There's Blake (Eric Mabius), a man estranged from his ex-wife, and now running a cheap hotel where the characters all find themselves in, the Brit playboy Guy (Luke Brandon Field) being the rascal of the group with a penchant for all ladies, an illegal Mexican Julio (Fernando Noriega) who gets to LA in order to find work and sending back his money to his support his family, and Japanese gangster Takashi (played by Korean American Will Yun Lee) who wakes up from a coma and a steep memory of the woman of his life, but getting himself to LA with a pistol where its smuggling got casually explained away, the quintessential and literal Chekov's gun.

    The foursome bond together and in itself creates two contrasting pairs in an opposites attract fashion. Julio and Guy provides the comparison between one carefree and without responsibilities to others, with the other being the all round family guy out to look out for better opportunities in order to make a living and support his family back home. One travels to strange lands for pleasure, while the other out of family necessity. Blake and Takashi are the more deeply reflective type, where they get together over a meal, or over music by the late Leslie Cheung whose Canto-tune The Wind Blows On forms the background of protagonists each searching for purpose and meaning in their lives.

    Production values for a first film is superb, and perhaps it's because of the technicians behind the production that hail from a very mature industry, so much so that one's debut feature need not be a cheesy, laughable affair in terms of look and feel. Sure it may look like a typical indie film, but I suppose this will help the creative part of the production to focus on direction and fleshing of the characters, leaving aside the technical aspects to experts. Hence a film that worked on both fronts, with Mun Chee weaving very powerful backgrounds and narratives for each of the four male protagonists that sucks you into their lives and predicament, vesting your interest into what life dishes out to them.

    This is a drama through and through with slight comedy that balances out what would be a rather bleak though evocative tale about friendship, hope and the struggles of the emotionally downtrodden, all in search of that magic air in a new environment to look for live-changing directions.

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    Storyline

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • July 29, 2011 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • Singapore
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
      • Japanese
      • Armenian
    • Filming locations
      • Los Angeles, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • Hollywood Untitled
      • Big Machine Films
      • Singapore Film Commission
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 33 minutes
    • Color
      • Color

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