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==Synopsis==
==Synopsis==


Late one summer night in a residential neighborhood in [[upstate New York]], a car pulls up to a dark house. Out come Kathy ([[Hong Chau]]), a [[Medical transcription#As a profession|medical transcriber]] from [[Michigan]], and her son Cody (Lucas Jaye), carrying sleeping bags. They find the house has no [[mains power|electricity]] and leave for a nearby motel. Del ([[Brian Dennehy]]), an elderly widower next door, watches them from his upstairs window.
Late one summer night in a residential neighborhood in [[upstate New York]], a car pulls up to a dark house. Kathy ([[Hong Chau]]) and her son Cody (Lucas Jaye) have come to the house with their sleeping bags. They find the house has no [[mains power|electricity]] and leave for a nearby motel. Del ([[Brian Dennehy]]), an elderly widower next door, watches them from his upstairs window.


The next morning Kathy calls the electric utility to have power restored to her recently deceased older sister April's house; Kathy has come to pack it up and sell it. She learns that April owed the electric company $900. Upon returning to the house they realize that April was a [[Compulsive hoarding|hoarder]].
The next morning Kathy calls the electric utility to have power restored to her recently deceased older sister April's house; Kathy has come to pack it up and sell it. She learns that April owed the electric company $900. Upon returning to the house they realize that April was a [[Compulsive hoarding|hoarder]].


Cody goes outside and tries to get some water to drink from the hose. Del sees him from his porch and tells him to turn the faucet the other way, and Cody does, wetting his shirt in the process. Kathy sees this and assumes that Cody bothered Del. She explains her presence and curtly tells Del she does not let her son talk to strangers. But later, when she learns Del's ride to a local veterans' event has not shown up, Kathy takes him to the local [[Veterans of Foreign Wars]] (VFW) lodge herself, while complaining about the electric bill.
Cody goes outside and tries to get some water to drink from a hose. Del sees him from his porch and tells him to turn the faucet the other way, and Cody does, wetting his shirt in the process. Kathy sees this and assumes that Cody bothered Del. She explains her presence and curtly tells Del she does not let her son talk to strangers. But later, when she learns Del's ride to a local veterans' event has not shown up, Kathy takes him to the local [[Veterans of Foreign Wars]] (VFW) lodge herself, while complaining about the electric bill.


When Kathy and Cody return to April's house the next day, they discover that Del has run an [[extension cord]] across the driveway from his house to theirs. With the lights on, they find a dead cat in an upstairs bathroom, a sight that makes Cody wet his pants. Later, Kathy and Cody visit Charlene (Robyn Payne), a local [[Realtor]], to list the house. Kathy balks at taking Charlene on a walk-through, but after Charlene tells her that the house does not need to be presentable she relents. When Charlene sees the inside, she understands why Kathy's reservations.
When Kathy and Cody return to April's house the next day, they discover that Del has run an [[extension cord]] across the driveway from his house to theirs. Later, Kathy and Cody visit Charlene (Robyn Payne), a local [[Realtor]], to list the house. Kathy balks at taking Charlene on a walk-through, but after Charlene tells her that the house does not need to be presentable she relents. When Charlene sees the inside, she understands why Kathy had reservations.


That night at the motel Cody asks Kathy about April, whom she did not know well since April was 12 years older. The next day, Cody meets two other neighborhood children while cleaning some furniture in the driveway. Cody also sees two other boys, Brandon and Reese, imitating [[professional wrestling|professional wrestlers]]. Their grandmother, Linda ([[Christine Ebersole]]) comes to greet Kathy outside. Linda recalls that April was a nice woman who did not want anyone to come into the house.
That night at the motel Cody asks Kathy about April, whom she did not know well since April was 12 years older. The next day, Cody meets two other neighborhood children while cleaning some furniture in the driveway. Cody also sees two other boys, Brandon and Reese, imitating [[professional wrestling|professional wrestlers]]. The boys grandmother, Linda ([[Christine Ebersole]]) comes to greet Kathy outside. Linda recalls that April was a nice woman who did not want anyone to come into the house.


Kathy and Cody check out of the motel and start sleeping in the house. Del helps Cody bury the dead cat, and takes him to [[Bingo (American version)|bingo]] at the VFW. Cody invites Del and the other neighborhood children to his birthday party at a local roller rink; when Del is the only invitee to show up they relocate to the VFW lodge and celebrate with Del's friends.
Kathy and Cody check out of the motel and start sleeping in the house. Del helps Cody bury a dead cat, and takes him to [[Bingo (American version)|bingo]] at the VFW.


Linda one day offers to watch Cody while Kathy does some errands, but he does not share Brandon and Reese's love of wrestling and vomits rather than wrestle them. He runs out of Linda's house. Del sees him and recalls how he, too, vomited once as a younger man while on a [[troop ship]] to the [[Korean War]]. Thereafter, Cody spends more time with the quieter Del.
Linda one day offers to watch Cody while Kathy does some errands, but he does not share Brandon and Reese's love of wrestling and vomits rather than wrestle them. He runs out of Linda's house. Del sees him and recalls how he, too, vomited once as a younger man while on a [[troop ship]] to the [[Korean War]]. Thereafter, Cody spends more time with the quieter Del.


Kathy eventually gets the house clean enough to live in, and holds a [[yard sale]]. She suggests to Cody the possibility that instead of selling the house they move into it, which he supports. At the same time, Del's daughter, a judge in [[Seattle]], tells him space has become available in a nursing home near her.
Kathy eventually gets the house clean enough to live in, and holds a [[yard sale]]. She suggests to Cody the possibility that instead of selling the house they move into it, which he supports. At the same time, Del's daughter, a judge in [[Seattle]], tells him space has become available in a nursing home near her.

Cody invites Del and the other neighborhood children to his birthday party at a local roller rink; when Del is the only invitee to show up they relocate to the VFW lodge and celebrate with Del's friends.


Cody tells Del that he and his mother are planning to move in, and Del tells Cody he will be moving to be closer to his daughter and her wife. Later, on the day Del moves out, he and Cody have a last conversation on his porch. Cody says Kathy told him they could still take the long trip to visit Del. Del jokes about Cody hitchhiking across the country, leading Del to recall a similar hitchhiking trip he took with a friend after leaving the Army, and ruminate about how it has since seemed like so many years have gone by so quickly but how he would not change much of it.
Cody tells Del that he and his mother are planning to move in, and Del tells Cody he will be moving to be closer to his daughter and her wife. Later, on the day Del moves out, he and Cody have a last conversation on his porch. Cody says Kathy told him they could still take the long trip to visit Del. Del jokes about Cody hitchhiking across the country, leading Del to recall a similar hitchhiking trip he took with a friend after leaving the Army, and ruminate about how it has since seemed like so many years have gone by so quickly but how he would not change much of it.

Revision as of 19:16, 24 January 2021

Driveways
Official promotional poster
Directed byAndrew Ahn
Written by
  • Hannah Bos
  • Paul Thureen
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyKi Jin Kim
Edited byKatherine McQuerry
Music byJay Wadley
Production
companies
Distributed byFilmRise
Release dates
  • February 10, 2019 (2019-02-10) (Berlinale)
  • May 7, 2020 (2020-05-07) (United States)
Running time
83 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Driveways is a 2019 American drama film directed by Andrew Ahn and starring Hong Chau, Lucas Jaye, and Brian Dennehy, from an original screenplay by playwrights Hannah Bos and Paul Thureen. The film had its world premiere at the Berlin International Film Festival on February 10, and its American premiere at the Tribeca Film Festival April 30. FilmRise released it via video-on-demand in the United States on May 7, 2020, in lieu of a theatrical release due to the COVID-19 pandemic. It tells the story of a woman who has come to the house of her late sister to pack it up and prepare it for sale. While there, her young son strikes up a friendship with an elderly widower living next door.

The film received very enthusiastic reviews. Praise focused primarily on two aspects of the film: its depiction of the connections among neighbors, something many people had come to miss due to the social distancing measures taken to control the pandemic, and Dennehy's performance. He had died a month prior to release, and critics said it was an excellent final film for him.

Ahn chose Bos and Thureen's script, derived from their childhoods in the Midwest, for his second feature out of a desire to direct something that was an intimate family drama, not written by him. He also wanted to get away from the gay Korean American milieu in which his debut, Spa Night, was set, although he did later change two main characters from white to Asian for artistic reasons. Maven Pictures backed the production, and filming took place in summer 2018 in the Hudson Valley region of New York, primarily around Poughkeepsie.

Synopsis

Late one summer night in a residential neighborhood in upstate New York, a car pulls up to a dark house. Kathy (Hong Chau) and her son Cody (Lucas Jaye) have come to the house with their sleeping bags. They find the house has no electricity and leave for a nearby motel. Del (Brian Dennehy), an elderly widower next door, watches them from his upstairs window.

The next morning Kathy calls the electric utility to have power restored to her recently deceased older sister April's house; Kathy has come to pack it up and sell it. She learns that April owed the electric company $900. Upon returning to the house they realize that April was a hoarder.

Cody goes outside and tries to get some water to drink from a hose. Del sees him from his porch and tells him to turn the faucet the other way, and Cody does, wetting his shirt in the process. Kathy sees this and assumes that Cody bothered Del. She explains her presence and curtly tells Del she does not let her son talk to strangers. But later, when she learns Del's ride to a local veterans' event has not shown up, Kathy takes him to the local Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) lodge herself, while complaining about the electric bill.

When Kathy and Cody return to April's house the next day, they discover that Del has run an extension cord across the driveway from his house to theirs. Later, Kathy and Cody visit Charlene (Robyn Payne), a local Realtor, to list the house. Kathy balks at taking Charlene on a walk-through, but after Charlene tells her that the house does not need to be presentable she relents. When Charlene sees the inside, she understands why Kathy had reservations.

That night at the motel Cody asks Kathy about April, whom she did not know well since April was 12 years older. The next day, Cody meets two other neighborhood children while cleaning some furniture in the driveway. Cody also sees two other boys, Brandon and Reese, imitating professional wrestlers. The boys grandmother, Linda (Christine Ebersole) comes to greet Kathy outside. Linda recalls that April was a nice woman who did not want anyone to come into the house.

Kathy and Cody check out of the motel and start sleeping in the house. Del helps Cody bury a dead cat, and takes him to bingo at the VFW.

Linda one day offers to watch Cody while Kathy does some errands, but he does not share Brandon and Reese's love of wrestling and vomits rather than wrestle them. He runs out of Linda's house. Del sees him and recalls how he, too, vomited once as a younger man while on a troop ship to the Korean War. Thereafter, Cody spends more time with the quieter Del.

Kathy eventually gets the house clean enough to live in, and holds a yard sale. She suggests to Cody the possibility that instead of selling the house they move into it, which he supports. At the same time, Del's daughter, a judge in Seattle, tells him space has become available in a nursing home near her.

Cody invites Del and the other neighborhood children to his birthday party at a local roller rink; when Del is the only invitee to show up they relocate to the VFW lodge and celebrate with Del's friends.

Cody tells Del that he and his mother are planning to move in, and Del tells Cody he will be moving to be closer to his daughter and her wife. Later, on the day Del moves out, he and Cody have a last conversation on his porch. Cody says Kathy told him they could still take the long trip to visit Del. Del jokes about Cody hitchhiking across the country, leading Del to recall a similar hitchhiking trip he took with a friend after leaving the Army, and ruminate about how it has since seemed like so many years have gone by so quickly but how he would not change much of it.

Cast

  • Hong Chau as Kathy
  • Lucas Jaye as Cody
  • Brian Dennehy as Del
  • Christine Ebersole as Linda
  • Jerry Adler as Rodger
  • Stan Carp as Lester
  • Bill Buell as Tom
  • Robyn Payne as Charlene
  • Samantha Jones as Lisa
  • Sophia DeStefano as Anna
  • Jeter Rivera as Miguel
  • Jack Caleb as Brandon
  • James DiGiacomo as Reese
  • Joe Felece as Bingo Caller
  • Jennifer Delora as Cheryl
  • Laurent Rejto as Cashier

Production

After the success of Spa Night, his feature debut, director Andrew Ahn was looking for his next project to be something more distant from his personal experience. "I felt really sick of myself", he told Filmmaker. "I didn't want to talk about being gay and Korean-American anymore."[1]

According to Chau, who had already reached out to Ahn to express interest in working with him, she was even further intrigued when he told her how he had told the producers that for his second film he was interested in telling an intimate family story. She found it a departure from the ambitions of most directors of well-regarded debut features, who in her experience want to move on to big-budget franchise pictures. "I thought, 'I got to ride with this guy.'"[2]

Paul Thureen says the inspiration for the story came from his co-writer Hannah Bos's background working in her mother's antique shop as a child. "She usually had to go into people's houses after they died", he recalled. "So she's interested in the stories objects tell about people."[3]: 5:15  The hitchhiking trip Del recounts taking as a younger man after his military service in the film's closing monologue is similar to one Thureen's father took at a similar stage in his life,[3]: 21:50  and Thureen, like Cody, was shy and anxious to the point of vomiting before his own birthday parties or other stressful social events, as a child, leading him to value relationships with adults.[3]: 30:15 

"What I love about Hannah and Paul's writing is that they understand characters so well and the dramatics of a scene" Ahn said. "There's a real tension to their work but in a beautifully subtle way, and they are doing things that I wouldn't be able to do." Specifically, in Driveways he pointed to Del's final monologue as one of them.[4]

Preproduction

Ahn had considered many scripts before Joe Pirro sent him Driveways, which he instantly liked. "I could envision the impact it might have on audiences and the story felt really meaningful to me. I wanted to do it." He immediately suggested that Kathy and Cody be written as Asian rather than White, which he found ironic given his initial desire to do something as unlike his first film as possible, in order to emphasize their otherness in April's community. Other than that, the film does not reference their ethnicity, something Chau appreciated. "I certainly would not have signed up for the film if Kathy and Cody were just two-dimensional characters who existed solely to experience blatant racism or microaggressions, so that the audience could be delivered some clunky message about how racism is bad."[5]

The story was originally set in western Illinois, where writers Hannah Bos and Paul Thureen had grown up. Ahn found the move to the Hudson Valley of New York, to also be ironic since it led to principal photography taking place mostly in and around Poughkeepsie, where Bos and Thureen had met as students at Vassar College.[1] The script did not require much revision to reflect that change.[3]: 21:15 

Where Spa Night had been difficult to finance due to its subject matter, relying in part on money raised through Kickstarter, Ahn said, Driveways utilized traditional American independent film financing, which depended on the actors attached to the project. Since Dennehy had been one of the first actors to commit to the film,[1] after he liked the script,[6][a] and Hong Chau, after seeing Spa Night at theaters, had emailed Ahn and told him she would be willing to do anything he wanted her to do in his next film,[4] Maven Pictures soon took the film on.[1]

The two houses used in the film, seen in January 2021

Ahn was not comfortable beginning production in 2018 until a pair of houses, both with porches, separated by a driveway, could be found to serve as the film's primary location. "I really wanted an authenticity of space and place", he explained. "That continuity was important for the actors, that they could walk in and walk out of a space and not have to separate between the two. We wouldn't have to shoot one part of the scene in one location on one day and then another part of the scene at a different location on another day." Ahn, the producers and the location scout searched all over the Poughkeepsie area; ultimately they asked a local real estate broker, who turned out to not only know exactly where there was a pair of houses that fit the film's specifications, but was familiar with the families that lived in them.[1]

It was important to Ahn as well that it be clear the neighborhood, while residential, was not in a city. He believed a "small-town feel" would accentuate the initial wariness Kathy and Cody felt, especially as minorities, who mostly live in cities. "At the same time, we also wanted to capture the natural beauty of the space." Ahn drove around looking for some of the other locations since he wanted to be as familiar with the area as possible in order to portray it effectively.[1]

Lucas Jaye, who had previously had a recurring role in Fuller House[8] but had not been in any films before, was the last of the three leads to be cast. Chau read with only him, which came as a great relief to her since she did not look forward to having to choose among children. She credited casting director Avy Kaufman with having narrowed the choice down to Jaye; Ahn told her later that he had also come to the same conclusion and wanted to see how well she and Jaye worked together.[7]

The production's relative proximity to New York City also helped make it possible for Christine Ebersole to play Linda. She was performing on Broadway at the time, and "could come and do a couple hours on our set and then go back down to New York City for an evening performance. It really worked out for us."[1] The actress enjoyed doing the part because of the filmmakers' openness to her interpretation. "There were absolutely no impediments to figuring out who this character was.[3]: 10:25 

Costume designer Matthew Simonelli suggested to Ahn that Cody and Kathy should wear some of the same shirts in different scenes, as the characters had come to town expecting to spend no more than a few days packing up April's house at first and would likely find themselves forced to share clothes when they extended their stay.[3]: 17:45 

Filming

Principal photography took place during July and August 2018.[9] The production set up offices at Poughkeepsie's Mid-Hudson Civic Center (now the Majed J. Nesheiwat Convention Center) and built some sets for interior scenes there. Elsewhere in Dutchess County, locations used besides the neighborhood with the two houses included a Hyde Park ice cream stand and roller rink[10] where Hannah Bos, one of the writers, had gone skating while a student at Vassar.[1] Another scene was filmed at a hardware store in nearby Pleasant Valley.[10]

The production found some other locations across the Hudson River in Ulster County. Del and Cody visit the Rosendale Library in one scene; Del and Rodger go shopping at a small grocery store in that town in another.[9] Some urban street scenes were shot in Kingston and New Paltz.[10] Pirro estimated that the production spent over a million dollars during 10 weeks of shooting.[11]

Ahn had worked with a child actor before when making his debut short Andy, so "I wasn't intimidated by the challenge of doing a feature film with a child actor at the center." He had shown Jaye's parents, but not Jaye himself, the script; Jaye was only shown the scenes he would do 20 or 30 minutes before shooting them. "I just wanted him to stay present and in the moment", Ahn said, adding that Jaye did that very well in every scene.[1]

Jaye and Dennehy worked together for several days before Chau arrived to shoot her scenes. During that time, they developed a rapport that their characters echoed.[7] Ahn recalls that on the day they shot the scene in which Del tells Cody he will be moving to Seattle, after they had finished shooting both actors' closeups and, the director thought, the scene, Dennehy asked if they could shoot some more because Jaye's performance had given him some ideas. Ahn was impressed by the older actor's respect for his young costar.[1]

Chau, too, playing a mother in a film for the first time,[7] developed a similar rapport with Jaye. Ahn recalls how, in the scene where the two eat pizza on the darkened porch of April's house, they kept interacting and eating between takes.[1] "It felt really easy and natural. I was lucky."[7]

Some improvisation was involved in her scenes with Jaye, Chau said. "I think I might have added a couple more fucks than what was in the script" when around him, she recalls. "I think that they were edited out."[2] After cinematographer Ki Jin Kim noticed that Jaye was stomping Chau's discarded cigarette out on every take of the truck stop scene early in the film, Ahn put a closeup of it[3]: 16:50  in the film to establish the relationship between the characters.[1]

Ahn also added the scene where Chau retreats to a bar to take a break later in the film. "[I]t just feels so real in the situation", he told The Film Stage. "I really love that sequence for that little bit of seeing a woman's independence, a mother's independence." Ahn was also impressed by how well Chau played Big Buck Hunter; he said it made him want to write an action film for her.[4] He and Kim began realizing that Chau did not need much coverage, so they increasingly began shooting her in longer takes.[3]: 44:20 

Chau established her own rapport with Dennehy, whom she believes found the shoot physically challenging due to his age and the summer heat. Since the film's budget was too low for the actors to have individual trailers, Dennehy would relax between his scenes the living room of the house not in use,[7] and talk with the workers at the craft service table, or anyone else there with him.[2] Chau says some of his favorite subjects when she talked with him were his grandchildren, acting and his childhood in New York.[7]

Ahn found that directing other people's writing, which he had only done for a TV show previously, improved him as a director. "There's a certain kind of objectivity that you can have with the material when you haven't written it", he observed. When directing his own work, if a scene confused him he would simply rewrite it. But in Bos and Thureen's script, he found himself trying to understand the scene better instead. "I would really investigate the material."[4]

Ahn added that he believed the experience made him a better writer. "You begin to see, in a very intense way, what other writers are doing ... When you actually have to direct that other person's screenplay, the lessons that you learn about writing really come across." As a result of the experience, Ahn planned to alternate between directing his own work and others' for the rest of his filmmaking career.[1]

At an online panel discussion hosted by the Brooklyn Academy of Music, Ahn was asked what lessons he learned from making Spa Night that helped in making Driveways. He said that it was how much directing a film is a physically demanding activity, as he was moving around, blocking actors and the camera, and crouching to avoid being on camera, for longer than he had during his first movie, during a very hot and wet summer. Ahn said that he took steps to prepare by getting adequate rest and staying hydrated. He failed to wear adequate shoes, though, and lost sensation in his toes later in the shoot.[3]: 30:25 

Release

The film had its world premiere at the Berlin International Film Festival on February 10, 2019.[12] It also screened at the Tribeca Film Festival on April 30, as one of five films selected for the festival's first Critics' Week.[13] In December, FilmRise acquired distribution rights.[14]

With most theaters closed due to the COVID-19 pandemic,[15] FilmRise released Driveways to video-on-demand services[16] on May 7, 2020.[17]

Critical reception

On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 100% based on 69 reviews, with an average rating of 7.90/10. The site's critics consensus reads: "Understated yet powerful, Driveways is a character study anchored in fundamental decency -- and a poignant farewell to Brian Dennehy."[18] At Metacritic the film has a weighted average score of 83 out of 100, based on 19 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".[19]

Accolades

At the 2020 Film Independent Spirit Award, the film was nominated for Best First Screenplay and Best Female Lead.[20]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ According to Chau, when Ahn's older brother, who took no interest in his brother's film career, found out that Andrew would be making a movie with Dennehy, was excited to learn his brother would be working with the actor known for playing Sheriff Teasle in First Blood, the first of the Rambo movies.[7]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Ahn, Andrew (May 14, 2020). "'Directing Other People's Writing Makes You Become a Better Writer': Andrew Ahn on Driveways". Filmmaker (Interview). Interviewed by Erik Luers. New York: Independent Filmmaker Project. Retrieved January 16, 2021.
  2. ^ a b c Chau, Hong (May 6, 2020). "'Driveways': Hong Chau Discusses Andrew Ahn's New Film, Working With Brian Dennehy & More". ThePlaylist.Net (Interview). Interviewed by Luke Hicks. Retrieved January 18, 2021.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i Andrew Ahn, Hannah Bos, Hong Chau, Christine Ebersole, Lucas Jaye, Paul Thureen (May 6, 2020). Driveways Q&A (Internet video). Brooklyn Academy of Music. Retrieved January 19, 2021.
  4. ^ a b c d Ahn, Andrew (May 8, 2019). "Andrew Ahn on 'Driveways,' Queer Sensibilities, Uncynical Filmmaking, and the Art of Acting". The Film Stage (Interview). Interviewed by Joshua Encinias. New York. Retrieved January 17, 2021.
  5. ^ Jones, Isabel (May 15, 2020). "Trust Me: Driveways Is the Best Movie I've Seen All Year". InStyle. Retrieved January 20, 2021.
  6. ^ Brian Dennehy on Driveways at Tribeca Film Festival 2019 premiere - interview (Internet video). The Upcoming. May 3, 2019. Event occurs at 1:35. Retrieved January 20, 2021.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Chau, Hong (May 7, 2020). "Hong Chau Talks Shooting the Feel-Good 'Driveways' With Brian Dennehy". Observer.com (Interview). Interviewed by Deana Bianco. New York: Observer Media. Retrieved January 17, 2021.
  8. ^ Bibbiani, William (May 6, 2019). "'Driveways' Film Review: Impeccable Performances Enhance Charming Tale of Intergenerational Friendship". TheWrap. Retrieved January 17, 2021.
  9. ^ a b "Driveways, Featuring Brian Dennehy, Set For Virtual Premiere". Hudson Valley Film Commission. May 7, 2020. Retrieved January 18, 2021.
  10. ^ a b c Barry, John W. (May 5, 2020). "Brian Dennehy: 'Driveways,' filmed locally, set for online debut Wednesday". Poughkeepsie Journal. Retrieved January 18, 2021.
  11. ^ Pirro, Joe (December 24, 2020). "Quote of the Day". Facebook. Hudson Valley Film Commission. Retrieved January 18, 2021.
  12. ^ Wiseman, Andreas (February 10, 2019). "'Driveways': First Footage Of James Schamus-Produced Berlin Drama Starring Hong Chau & Brian Dennehy — EFM". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved December 2, 2019.
  13. ^ Kohn, Eric (April 26, 2019). "Tribeca Critics' Week: How a New Sidebar Argues for the Role of Critics in Festival Programming". IndieWire. Retrieved January 23, 2021.
  14. ^ Wiseman, Andreas (December 2, 2019). "FilmRise Nabs North American Rights To James Schamus-Produced Berlin & Tribeca Title 'Driveways'". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved December 2, 2019.
  15. ^ Sperling, Nicole; Barnes, Brooks (April 23, 2020). "Movie Theaters, Urged to Open, Want to Delay Showtime". The New York Times. Retrieved January 23, 2021.
  16. ^ "Driveways". FilmRise. Retrieved January 23, 2021.
  17. ^ Phillips, Michael (May 7, 2020). "'Driveways' review: A beautiful farewell from Brian Dennehy in one of the screen highlights of 2020". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved January 23, 2021.
  18. ^ "Driveways (2019)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved January 21, 2021.
  19. ^ "Driveways Reviews". Metacritic. Retrieved October 12, 2020.
  20. ^ "The 2020 Film Independent Spirit Award Nominees are Here!". Film Independent. November 21, 2019. Retrieved November 21, 2019.

External links