World Famous Comics: A Home at the End of the World
A Home at the End of the World
Starring: Harris Allan, Jeff J.J. Authors, Andrew Chalmers, Joshua Close, Wendy Crewson Average Rating: Aspect Ratio: 2.40:1 Audience Rating: R (Restricted) Binding: DVD Format: AC-3, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, Surround Sound, NTSC Label: Warner Home Video Number of Items: 1 Region Code: 1 Release Date: November 02, 2004 Running Time: 97 minutes Theatrical Release Date: 2004
Description: From the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Hours comes a story that chronicles a dozen years in the lives of two best friends. The film charts a journey of trials, triumphs, loves and losses. Now the question is: can they navigate the unusual triangle they've created and hold their friendship together?
DVD Features: Featurette:The Journey Home: behind-the-scenes featurette Theatrical Trailer
Amazon.com: Colin Farrell takes a break from action flicks (S.W.A.T., Alexander) to make A Home at the End of the World, an intimate film based on a novel by Michael Cunningham (author of The Hours). As a boy, Bobby (played as an adult by Farrell) loses both parents and his beloved older brother, ending up more-or-less adopted by the family of his best friend, Jonathan (played as an adult by Dallas Roberts). Jonathan's feelings for Bobby go beyond friendship; Bobby is open to the possibilities. Bobby follows Jonathan to New York and falls into a relationship with Clare (Robin Wright Penn, The Princess Bride). The three form an alternative family, move out to the country, and discover that even alternative families have their dysfunctions. Bobby is so innocent and open he sometimes seems like a pansexual Forrest Gump, but Roberts, Wright Penn, and Sissy Spacek give rich performances. --Bret Fetzer
Truely good The movie was really good with good performance by the Actors. Who would have thought Colin Farrell was ever involved in something as thought provoking as this subject matter. Well done.
I really wanted to like this movie I really wanted to like this movie. I had read the book,and the book was amazing!! The movie changed a lot of the main story line, and it became a mish-mash of ridiculous scenes. If you did not read the book, you might enjoy this, for those of us who did, stay away from this film.
Growing Dead This is a DVD about an individual who learns from a very young age about life. He learns about sex and drugs from his older brother. Who also takes to the back yard where a grave yard is conveniently placed. His brother teaches him about death as he runs through a glass window. It tells of his mothers deat but does not show it. His sexual awakening is with an adolescent boy his age. Later on he has a wife and a baby. He is a good father. Though he still has feelings for his male lover. When his wife puts 2+2 togeather she goes off to Deleware to be with her mother. Paul D. Eccles
Simply satisfactory. While Michael Cunningham's book was phenomenal - each character working their way into your heart with their own narration - the film version is only satisfactory. The similarities, even in dialogue, are resounding (I find myself smile and nod at the moments I remember clearly), but the speed of the film is unsettling, and the deviations from the original story are disappointing. I commend the filmmakers for taking on the story of an extremely nontraditional family (major kudos - it's great!), but tell it the way it was written and to a better degree - not in fast-moving short scene selections that leave much to be desired.
A small gem of a movie! This movie took me by surprise. A tour de force of acting, especially by Colin Farrell, and really, by just about everyone in the movie, I was captivated from first to last. A poignant story, it was made all the more enjoyable by the wealth of 70's & 80's music intergral to the story line. What a story. Beautifully told. Can't recommend it enough.