Come Early Morning Movie Review
Come Early Morning Review
"Come Early Morning" Overview

Rating: R
2006
Cast and Crew
Director : Joey Lauren AdamsProducer : Ed Bass,Michael Litvak,Julie Yom,Holly Wiersma
Screenwiter : Joey Lauren Adams
Starring : Ashley Judd,Laura Prepon,Jeffrey Donovan,Scott Wilson
For some reason, Come Early Morning was gone by early afternoon. I'm not sure
why this indie gem was so utterly overlooked, but it's well worth a screening,
especially for Ashley Judd fans who are often disappointed by the dreck in
which she so often chooses to star. This movie is a wonderful bookend of sorts
to Judd's first significant feature, the luminous Ruby in Paradise. In both
films, Judd plays a not-quite-white-trash southern woman trying to carve out a
place for herself in a tough world. In Ruby she was a 20-ish waif fleeing an
abusive family in Tennessee. Here she's a 35-year-old construction contractor
in Arkansas so damaged by her distant alcoholic father (Scott Wilson) that
she's utterly incapable of having a meaningful relationship with a man.
Lucy Fowler's modus operandi is to get totally drunk down at a local roadhouse
called the Forge and then hook up with whichever man strikes her fancy. The
next (early) morning, she finds herself picking up her panties off a motel room
floor, sneaking out before the guy wakes up, and racing home to rehydrate and
treat her hangover before heading out in her pickup truck to a construction
site. Her roommate Kim (Laura Prepon) looks on disapprovingly.
Lucy reaches out to her father, who lives alone and in silence in a nearby
apartment. Having heard he's been attending a new holy roller church, she
visits him and asks to go with him to next Sunday's service. He doesn't seem to
care one way or the other, so she attends and finds at least a little comfort
in the Bible-thumping pastor's sermon.
Things get interesting -- and upsetting -- for Lucy when a guy she meets at the
Forge turns out to be a true gentleman. Cal (Jeffrey Donovan) is new in town,
drives a T-top Camaro, and couldn’t be more polite and solicitous. He's happy
to invite Kim along as a chaperone on his first date with Lucy but can't
understand when Lucy reverts to her usual behavior and tries to slip out the
morning after without talking to him. Another date (involving hunting and
cooking frogs!) also causes Lucy stress. She's pathologically afraid of getting
close to anyone. "I'm not good with relationships," she admits to the baffled
Cal, who may soon become "the man that got away."
The role of Lucy was custom made for Judd, and she's brilliant in it. Maybe she
should stick to the country thing. (It's in her blood, right?) Writer/director
Joey Lauren Adams (the helium-voiced star of Chasing Amy) succeeds with her
debut effort, finding great subtlety in the story, the settings, and the
performances. In fact, Come Early Morning would make a perfect double feature
with Ruby in Paradise. Watching them back to back would give you a great
appreciation for what Judd is capable of when she's got her hands on the right
material.
Just not too early, OK?
Reviewer: Don Willmott





