Get Low (film)

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Get Low

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Aaron Schneider
Produced by
  • Dean Zanuck
  • David Gundlach
Screenplay by
Story by
  • Chris Provenzano
  • Scott Seeke
Starring
Music by Jan A. P. Kaczmarek
Cinematography David Boyd
Editing by Aaron Schneider
Studio
  • K5 International
  • Zanuck Independent
  • David Gundlach Productions
  • Lara Enterprises
  • TVN
  • Butcher's Run Films
Distributed by Sony Pictures Classics
Release date(s) September 12, 2009 (2009-09-12) (TIFF)
July 30, 2010 (2010-07-30) (United States)
Running time 100 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $7 million
Box office $9,513,225

Get Low is a 2009 drama film directed by Aaron Schneider, written by Chris Provenzano and C. Gaby Mitchell, and starring Robert Duvall, Bill Murray, Sissy Spacek, Lucas Black, Gerald McRaney, Bill Cobbs, Lori Beth Edgeman, Andrea Powell, Rebecca Grant, Scott Cooper, and Chandler Riggs. The motion picture was filmed entirely on location in Georgia, and support for the production was provided by the Georgia Department of Economic Development.[1]

The film premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival and is distributed by Sony Pictures Classics. For his performance, Robert Duvall was awarded the Hollywood Award for Best Actor in October 2010. The film was released on July 30, 2010, in the United States. It received positive reviews from critics.

Contents

[edit] Plot

No one really understands Felix Bush (Robert Duvall), who lives as a hermit deep in the woods. Rumors surround him, like how he might have killed in cold blood, and that he's in league with the devil. So the town is surprised when Felix shows up in town, demanding a "funeral party" for himself. Frank Quinn (Bill Murray), the owner of the local funeral parlor, sees an opportunity for some money, and agrees to let the townsfolk tell Felix Bush the stories they've heard about him. Also a lottery is organized, where people can win Bush's property. Many people buy a ticket. However, nobody wants to tell a story because people fear revenge from Bush.

Things get more complicated when an old mystery is remembered, involving a local widow named Mattie Darrow (Sissy Spacek), who was Bush's girlfriend in their youth, and her deceased sister, Mary Lee. With the help of a preacher who insists that Bush "tell her the truth," Bush recounts to those gathered at his funeral party and, particularly Mattie, about an incident 40 years ago. He reveals he had a relationship with Mattie's married sister, Mary Lee. He confessed to Mattie that it was Mary Lee who was his true love, his only love. They made plans to run away together, and when she didn't arrive at the agreed place, he went to her home to search for her. He discovered that her husband had attacked her with a hammer, knocking her out. The husband threw a kerosene lamp against a wall to set the house on fire and kill himself, the unconscious Mary Lee, and Bush. Bush freed himself from the attacking husband, but as his clothes caught fire, he also saw Mary Lee catch fire. As he went to put the fire out, he felt himself flying through the window, possibly pushed by the husband, and he was unable to re-enter the house to save Mary Lee.

Suffering from survivor's guilt and refusing to ask for forgiveness from God because he didn't feel God was the victim, Bush secreted himself away in the woods in order to "jail himself" for what he perceived as his role in Mary Lee's death: his affair with Mary Lee prompted the husband to murder her the night she was to escape and meet Bush. His self-imposed exile was designed to deny himself a wife, children, and a family.

Relieved at having told his tale, he knew he could "get low" (die) in peace. Mattie forgives him, and they bond over their shared loss. Bush dies shortly after his funeral party and smiles gently at the ghostly image of Mary Lee waiting for him down the lane.

[edit] Cast

[edit] Production

The film is loosely based on a true story that took place in Roane County, Tennessee, in 1938. Robert Duvall's character, Felix Harry Bush, was based on a real person named Felix Breazeale.[2]

[edit] Critical response

The film has had positive reviews, with an 86% "fresh" rating (96% from top critics, out of 27 reviews) on review aggregate website Rotten Tomatoes, based on 112 reviews.[3] Robert Duvall has had overwhelming praise from critics with John Anderson of The Wall Street Journal predicting an Oscar nomination, writing, "...Mr. Duvall, who's probably looking at another Oscar nomination next year, gives it a heart."[4]

Casey Burchby at DVD Talk noted that Get Low contains "a wonderful group of performances by a dream cast. Surprisingly, none of the leads were in the running for any of 2010's major awards."[5]

[edit] Box office

The film opened to four cinemas on July 30, 2010, taking in a weekend gross of $90,900, averaging $22,725 per cinema. This placed the film at twenty-third overall for the weekend of July 30 to August 1, 2010.[6] As of January 2011, the film has grossed $9,100,230 in North America and $401,361 in other territories, totaling $9,513,225 worldwide.[6]

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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