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Movies / Upcoming / The Great New Wonderful
The Great New Wonderful

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The Great New Wonderful (2006)

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Reviews Counted:39

Fresh:29

Rotten:10

Average Rating:6.6/10

Consensus: Set in post-9/11 New York, this largely evocative dramedy interweaves the stories of five disconnected individuals who share an unspoken emotional malaise that shadows their attempts at returning to normal life.

Runtime: 87 mins

Genre: Dramas

US Box Office: $39,712

Synopsis: Viewers may be shocked to learn that a film set one year after September 11th was directed by Danny Leiner, the man responsible for such stoner comedies as HAROLD AND KUMAR GO TO WHITE CASTLE and... Viewers may be shocked to learn that a film set one year after September 11th was directed by Danny Leiner, the man responsible for such stoner comedies as HAROLD AND KUMAR GO TO WHITE CASTLE and DUDE, WHERE'S MY CAR?. While those films were hardly subtle, A GREAT NEW WONDERFUL tries very hard to be, never directly referring to 9/11 but rather to the general unease that was left in its wake. In what has become a familiar formula, the film relies on interweaving separate narratives to tell five stories simultaneously. As the lives of several New Yorkers from a variety of ethnic and socioeconomic backgrounds unwind in September 2002, we are invited to look for clues of post-traumatic stress. What unfolds, however, could very well have occurred in September 2000, as the film never clearly states how direct a connection the characters have to the World Trade Center attacks. As a ruthlessly ambitious young cake-maker (Maggie Gyllenhaal) aims to outdo her competition (Edie Falco), two immigrant security guards drive around the city and offer commentary on life. Meanwhile, a yuppie mother (Judy Greer) struggles to control her violent and disturbed 10-year-old, a lonely older woman (Olympia Dukakis) in Coney Island attempts to escape her tired routine, and an oddball psychiatrist (Tony Shalhoub) is hired to help an office worker (Jim Gaffigan) who lost several colleagues in the attacks. Sam Catlin's script creates a vagueness and mystery which is both refreshing and frustrating. While never dwelling in sentimentality, the film is thought-provoking in its pondering of the ways in which people deal and fail to deal with things stressful, painful, and shocking. [More]

Starring: Maggie Gyllenhaal, Edie Falco, Tony Shalhoub, Olympia Dukakis

Starring: Maggie Gyllenhaal, Edie Falco, Tony Shalhoub, Olympia Dukakis, Jim Gaffigan, Will Arnett, Stephen Colbert, Judy Greer, Thomas McCarthy, Naseeruddin Shah, Sharad Saxena, Seth Gilliam, Dick Latessa

Director: Danny Leiner

Director: Danny Leiner
Producer: Danny Leiner, Leslie Urdang
Studio: First Independent Pictures

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Reviews for The Great New Wonderful

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21 - 40 (sorted by date; Australian critics are listed first)
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There are good performances from nearly everyone, particularly Shah and Gyllenhaal, and the sub-90-minute running time whips right by; but there's nothing extraordinary here either.

Full Review Source: Los Angeles CityBeat | comment Comment
07/20/06
Andy Klein
Andy Klein
Los Angeles CityBeat

Better character-connection would inject this well photographed episodic journey around the island with a higher level of dramatic justification.

Full Review Source: Cinema Signals | comment Comment
07/17/06
Jules Brenner
Jules Brenner
Cinema Signals

...director Danny Leiner uses a dainty palette of tristesse (untouched when he made Dude, Where's My Car?) to suggest that the shadow of 9/11 makes every discontent more pathetic.

Full Review Source: Entertainment Weekly | comment Comment
07/05/06
Lisa Schwarzbaum
Lisa Schwarzbaum
Entertainment Weekly

It's a shame that The Great New Wonderful occasionally strains as it reaches all around New York, searching for touched lives and subtext; it's an overachiever already.

Full Review Source: Filmcritic.com | comment Comment
06/26/06
Jesse Hassenger
Jesse Hassenger
Filmcritic.com

Never mind that the neuroses of these characters cannot be traced to 9/11. The stories are intriguing.

Full Review Source: Compuserve | comment Comment
06/26/06
Harvey S. Karten
Harvey S. Karten
Compuserve

This is one of the more depressing films to come out this year.

Full Review Source: Greenwich Village Gazette | comment Comment
06/24/06
Eric Lurio
Eric Lurio
Greenwich Village Gazette

Finally, here is a film that addresses this major American catastrophe without shoving important messages down the audience’s throat.

Full Review Source: FilmStew.com | comment Comment
06/23/06
Susan Michals
Susan Michals
FilmStew.com

Sam Catlin's script may actually be a little too subtle, and connective tissue joining this diverse group of characters is rendered perilously thin.

Full Review Source: TV Guide's Movie Guide | comment Comment
06/23/06
Ken Fox
Ken Fox
TV Guide's Movie Guide

Keenly observed and beautifully acted, Danny Leiner's The Great New Wonderful is a seriocomic gem of rare grace and psychological nuance.

Full Review Source: Reel.com | comment Comment
06/23/06
Timothy Knight
Timothy Knight
Reel.com

The stories don't really connect, and for all the film's portentous shots of the changed skyline, there's no sense that 9/11 really changed these people.

Full Review Source: Newark Star-Ledger | comment Comment
06/23/06
Stephen Whitty
Stephen Whitty
Newark Star-Ledger

Why is such a talented cast doing such weak material? This finally becomes clear an hour in, when most of the actors get to do what they love: play emotional breakdowns.

Full Review Source: New York Post | comment Comment
06/23/06
Kyle Smith
Kyle Smith
New York Post

The stories are eye-opening and heartwarming at the same time, but you'll be moved less by empathy for the characters than by the summoning of your own emotional memories. This movie is personal.

Full Review Source: New York Daily News | comment Comment
06/23/06
Jack Mathews
Jack Mathews
New York Daily News

This mysteriously rich, mostly wonderful comedy-drama takes place in September 2002, when the lives of its unconnected New Yorkers have returned to something that looks like normal. 'Normal' being a thin layer of tissue paper over the abyss.

Full Review Source: Boston Globe | comment Comment
06/23/06
Ty Burr
Ty Burr
Boston Globe

Leiner's portrait of a post 9/11 New York shows a fragile population, jumpy and sad.

Full Review Source: About.com | comment Comment
06/23/06
Marcy Dermansky
Marcy Dermansky
About.com

A riveting and quirky movie about the aftershocks of 9/11 in the lives of a group of people still in denial a year later.

Full Review Source: Spirituality and Practice | comment Comment
06/22/06
Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat
Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat
Spirituality and Practice

Exhibits no trace of the random, goofy humor found in Leiner's first two directorial efforts.

Full Review Source: Slant Magazine | comment Comment
06/22/06
Nick Schager
Nick Schager
Slant Magazine

Danny Leiner's film offers a collection of quiet, tidy vignettes that occur simultaneously in New York City a year after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

comment Comment
06/22/06
A.O. Scott
A.O. Scott
New York Times
Top Critic Icon Top Critic

The Great New Wonderful squanders a fine opportunity: to examine the emotional effect of the events of Sept. 11, 2001, on the lives of New Yorkers one year later.

Full Review Source: Washington Post | comment Comment
06/22/06
Desson Thomson
Desson Thomson
Washington Post
Top Critic Icon Top Critic

For an independent film, it is quite a rewarding big-time experience.

Full Review Source: New York Observer | comment Comment
06/21/06
Rex Reed
Rex Reed
New York Observer

The film, set in September 2002, employs 9-11 as a thematic crutch, positing the attacks as little more than a backdrop for its characters' other, infinitely less significant woes.

Full Review Source: Village Voice | comment Comment
06/20/06
Ben Kenigsberg
Ben Kenigsberg
Village Voice
 
 
21 - 40 (sorted by date; Australian critics are listed first)
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