Saturday, January 5, 2008

OUR VERY OWN

OUR VERY OWN HOMEGROWN AND WELL DONE
In the 70's, a small-town group of friends anxiously await the return of Sondra Locke to her hometown, Shelbyville, Tennessee. They hang out together, drive to Nashville together, in fact, they seem to do everything together, except for Clancy Whitfield (an enduring Jason Ritter). He keeps secrets from his friends; well, as best he can. When his dad (Keith Carradine) is the town drunk people talk and everyone listens. His mother Joan (Allison Janney) does her best to keep a "happy face" and enable (a word not used so freely then) her husband while fighting off the re-possessors, banks, and other creditors. This isn't an action film; no explosions, no murders or escapes. This is a people film where the moves are made on the inside. Wonderfully enough, acting like Ritter and Janney let us in on those subtle differences. Janney owns every scene and Ritter isn't far behind. Clancy's friends are a bit stereotypical, but there's reason for that; stereotypes aren't imagined, they are based on something, but it doesn't detract from the movie in any way. This was a sweet movie, full of nostalgia and small town dreams.
Rating: Worth watching on a quiet night at home.