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Ithaca

  • 2015
  • PG
  • 1h 36m
IMDb RATING
5.5/10
3.3K
YOUR RATING
Ithaca (2015)
When his older brother leaves to fight in World War II, 14-year-old Homer Macauley takes on a job as a bicycle telegraph messenger to provide for his widowed mother, his older sister, and his younger brother. Delivering messages to the good people of Ithaca, he soon must grapple with a message that will change him forever.
Play trailer1:54
1 Video
13 Photos
DramaWar

With his older brother off to war, fourteen-year-old telegram messenger Homer Macauley comes of age in the summer of 1942.With his older brother off to war, fourteen-year-old telegram messenger Homer Macauley comes of age in the summer of 1942.With his older brother off to war, fourteen-year-old telegram messenger Homer Macauley comes of age in the summer of 1942.

  • Director
    • Meg Ryan
  • Writers
    • Erik Jendresen
    • William Saroyan
  • Stars
    • Alex Neustaedter
    • Meg Ryan
    • Sam Shepard
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.5/10
    3.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Meg Ryan
    • Writers
      • Erik Jendresen
      • William Saroyan
    • Stars
      • Alex Neustaedter
      • Meg Ryan
      • Sam Shepard
    • 38User reviews
    • 14Critic reviews
    • 36Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:54
    Official Trailer

    Photos12

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    Top cast71

    Edit
    Alex Neustaedter
    Alex Neustaedter
    • Homer Macauley
    Meg Ryan
    Meg Ryan
    • Mrs. Macauley
    Sam Shepard
    Sam Shepard
    • Willie Grogan
    Hamish Linklater
    Hamish Linklater
    • Tom Spangler
    Jack Quaid
    Jack Quaid
    • Marcus Macauley
    Tom Hanks
    Tom Hanks
    • Matthew Macauley
    Spencer Howell
    Spencer Howell
    • Ulysses Macauley
    Christine Nelson
    Christine Nelson
    • Bess Macauley
    Gabriel Basso
    Gabriel Basso
    • Tobey George
    Lois Robbins
    Lois Robbins
    • Mrs. Beaufrere
    Lucia Scarano
    Lucia Scarano
    • Mrs. Sandoval
    Molly Gordon
    Molly Gordon
    • Mary Arena
    Scott Shepherd
    Scott Shepherd
    • Mr. Corbett
    James McCool
    • Lionel
    Ethan Wasson
    • Auggie
    Nathan Riter
    • Enoch
    Jacob Rodriguez
    • Shag
    Danny Jolles
    Danny Jolles
    • Fat
    • Director
      • Meg Ryan
    • Writers
      • Erik Jendresen
      • William Saroyan
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews38

    5.53.2K
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    Featured reviews

    9reydman

    Not for sale

    It is good to see that there is movies made not for sale. Movies that bring some meaning and help to think. My English is poor so I cant good express myself, but I hope main point is clear. This movie will make you think,will leave something after to think about. And it is much deeper that it looks at the first time. War is big problem, and it is still actual , right now there is so many fights, pain, destroyed families, and people avoid to think about it. It is not fun, it is not comfortable, it is better pretend that its not exist. Thats why I think this kind of films will make word a bit better. Thanks to everyone who invested to this film.
    Gordon-11

    A plot that goes nowhere

    This film tells the story of a fourteen year old boy, who takes up the job as a messenger to deliver telegraphs back in the dark times of the second world war.

    The book might have been touching, but this film unfortunately does not work. The story does not seen to go anywhere. It doesn't develop the characters, and viewers don't understand why any of the characters are at the point that they are at. Why does the boy need to take up a job? Why does the older guy drink so much? What about the other messenger? The lack of background information makes me feel distant from the characters.

    It takes forty minutes of screen time to deliver the second telegraph. That's way too long for a film about a boy delivering telegraphs. The film could have explored more on how the sad telegraphs affected him, so there's wasted opportunity. I watched the film for Tom Hanks, and I don't even recall him having said a word!
    7cosmo_tiger

    A good movie that is worth seeing, but you spend the entire time waiting for one thing to happen and it ultimately distracts you

    "I don't know what's ahead, but whatever it is I am humbly ready for it." Homer Macauley (Neustaedter) has just watched his brother go off to fight in WWII and wants to do anything he can to help. He decides the best way for him to help his family is to get a job. He decides to become a bicycle telegraph messenger, and sets out to be the best and fastest one anyone has ever seen. Soon after he begins he is given a message that changes everything, and his job becomes more important than he ever imagined. This is a movie that I am very torn about. On one hand the movie has tremendous heart and leaves you hoping the movie won't end the way you expect it to. The acting is great and this is a very good character study of how the war affected the relatives stateside. On the other hand, you have a prediction on how the movie will end and you are just waiting for it to come to fruition. The fact that you think this way distracts you from the movie and the emotion of every other aspect seems to be lost and glossed over. I didn't think the movie was that bad and it is worth seeing, but about a year ago a movie called Little Boy came out and that was far better than this one. Overall, a good movie that is worth seeing, but you spend the entire time waiting for one thing to happen and it ultimately distracts you from the rest of the movie. I give this a B-.
    8CliffUnruh

    An honest, well produced motion picture with a story that fits the time.

    I would caution the reader to not take too much stock in the less- than-stellar, Monday morning director, critical reviews of this film. Tom Hanks' position in the billing should be the very last, if even noted. His face time in this movie is probably less than 2 minutes total and, for all intents and purposes, Meg Ryan's character is minor. Any decent character actress could have played her role without any impact on the motion picture as a whole. This is not "Sleepless In Seattle" nor is it a spin-off of any other Meg Ryan or Tom Hanks movie. These two "box office draws" are in this motion picture because as producer (Hanks) and director (Ryan) they chose to be; perhaps for the purpose of giving this film initial gravitas or simply because they wanted to be participants in the telling of a good story and a good story this is.

    This is a time-period piece conceived by William Saroyan in 1942 and published as the novel, "The Human Comedy" in 1943. Everything about this film is 1942 perhaps with the exception of the lack of recognizable, vintage 1940's music. This is a film depicting the morals and values of small town America at the beginning of the Second World War, not the values, morals, or expectations of those of us trapped so much in the present that we cannot recognize or even acknowledge the simple and far more innocent times portrayed in this film. Consequently, the gratuitous profanity so common in pictures today is refreshingly absent. This was a time when to be able to kiss a cute girl on her cheek was considered something very special to a young man heading off to war. It was a time when a little boy could get lost in town and the only real threat was that he might miss dinner. People did not lock their doors. A telegraph messenger, even though a stranger, was invited into one's home. If a person was involved in a nefarious or unseemly behavior they did their best to hide it. It was a time when a typical 14 year-old boy, like Homer Macauley (Alex Neustaedter), having experienced the Great Depression first hand, was already a responsible individual.

    This was the world in which Homer rode his bicycle, delivering telegrams, picking up night letters, and doing everything he could to see that the Postal Telegraph Company could effectively compete with Western Union; all the while being the one remaining "man of the house" in the wake of his father's untimely death and his older brother's departure for service overseas. Ithaca and the nation were slowly adjusting to war as the patriotic zeal following Pearl Harbor gave way to the more sobering realities of life during wartime. The presence of a telegraph messenger at the front door was not yet perceived as a sign of bad news but those in the telegraph business, transmitting, decoding, and delivering the messages, were becoming keenly aware of the war's growing, painful impact on families. In this context, with the war's presence being increasingly felt and experienced, the small day-to-day aspects of community were the constants, giving the character of Homer's 4-year old brother, Ulysses (Spencer Howell), the unique ability to provide an endearing presence of those things that are ultimately important and reminding us that, even when things appear to be going so very badly, life is good and must go on.

    Screenwriter Erik Jendresen says in his synopsis of the story line, "this is a coming-of-age story." In my view it is far more than that if, in watching the film, one will allow being transported to Ithaca, NY in 1942 and to embrace for 90 minutes or so, the values of the people living through this story at that time.
    7Nozz

    Maybe this will open the way for better Saroyan adaptations

    After World War II, William Saroyan gambled away all his money but he preferred to resort to hack work rather than sell movie rights to any of his novels. Not after his disappointment with the original movie of The Human Comedy. Part of it was vanity. He'd wanted to direct the movie, and MGM wouldn't let him. But it's also true that Hollywood has its own point of view and it doesn't always match Saroyan's.

    In Ithaca, which is a remake of the Human Comedy (now that Saroyan is dead), the main story and characters are preserved, but to me it doesn't look like Saroyan. In the book's classic illustrations by Don Freeman, Mrs. Macauley is older-looking and certainly not an attractive but obvious plastic-surgery veteran like Meg Ryan. Grogan is older-looking too. The character brought most successfully to the screen is Ulysses, although he shouldn't be losing his baby teeth if, as the dialog says, he's four. He's remarkable.

    The visuals are, to my taste, too expressionistic. The telegraph office is huge, the roads are wide, and things are too big in general except where Marcus the faraway soldier is involved. All the scenes with Marcus are crowded. That does emphasize the contrast between Ithaca and where Marcus is, but Marcus is not remote enough. Because there are continual voice-overs from his letters, I think the audience doesn't appreciate his absence as a factor. Even the dead father isn't completely absent, and although he adds a sorrowful note, this unkillable family togetherness diminishes the philosophical message that our human condition is one of loneliness and we must actively reach out.

    On the one hand, I expected a dustier, less prosperous-looking Ithaca. On the other hand, I was surprised that the choice of music verged on primitivity. More Appalachian than Californian.

    I think that a more realistic movie might have worked better, because of the need to carry some dialogue that can, if not handled right, sound unrealistically divorced from what everyday people really say. People declaiming unrealistic-sounding dialogue amidst unrealistic-looking scenery may be fine for the stage but it's difficult to sell on the screen.

    Still, the movie tries to be respectful of the original. It even includes some salutes to matters that only readers of the book will fully appreciate-- such a mention of unripe apples, referencing a whole episode involving unripe apricots in the book. I hope that since Saroyan is no longer alive to object, Hollywood will continue to mine his canon.

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Frères d'armes (2001)
    War

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Meg Ryan's directorial debut.
    • Goofs
      When they are in the cinema watching the newsreel, there's a shot of a man carrying a wounded solider across a river. The commentary states "when this country was extending a helping hand."

      That shot is actually of an Australian soldier helping a wounded Australian in the Kokoda campaign in New Guinea. The film is footage from Kokoda Front Line, by Damian Parer, who was an Australian combat camera man.
    • Quotes

      Mrs. Macauley: There will always be pain in this world, Homer. And a good man will seek to take the pain out of things.

    • Connections
      Featured in The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon: Meg Ryan/Nick Kroll and John Mulaney/Dan White (2016)

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    FAQ17

    • How long is Ithaca?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 9, 2016 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Thành Phố Ithaca
    • Filming locations
      • Virginia, USA
    • Production companies
      • Co-Op Entertainment
      • The Exchange
      • Apple Lane Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $5,000,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 36m(96 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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