Dreamland Movie Review
Dreamland Review
"Dreamland" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2006
Cast and Crew
Director : Jason MatznerProducer : Peter Heller,Doug Mankoff,Andrew Spaulding
Screenwiter : Tom Willett
Starring : Agnes Bruckner,Kelli Garner,Justin Long,John Corbett,Gina Gershon
If the movies are any guide, the world's best stories can be found in the
dingiest, most remote, most podunk trailer parks in the country. From Gas Food
Lodging to Raising Arizona, trailer parks appear to be populated with only two
categories of people: misunderstood genius artists and drunks.
Dreamland may be stuffed full of cliched characters in its trailer trash
setting (and why a trailer park would be constructed under power lines in the
middle of the New Mexico desert I have no idea), but let's put that aside for a
moment. At its heart it is not the awful direct-to-DVD movie that you're
probably expecting. The only legitimate reason for that is star Agnes Bruckner,
who continues to take role after role in movies that simply don't measure up to
her capabilities as one of our best young actresses. (If you haven't seen her
in her other headlining role this year, The Woods, don't.)
First-time director Jason Matzner directs this brief love triangle story with a
gentle hand. It has all the hallmarks of the trailer genre: hot, sweaty people
barely dressed and wasting away their empty days, plus soap opera dramatics to
create a loose structure for the film. The three sad sacks in this tryst are
Audrey (Bruckner), caring for her widower dad (John Corbett), now reduced to a
blubbering drunk with a shrine to his dead wife (who apparently had no life
insurance). Her best friend is the improbably hot Calista (Kelli Garner), who
dreams of becoming Miss America... despite being stricken with M.S. Into their
lives comes an aspiring college basketball player named, er, Mookie (the
hopelessly miscast Justin "I'm a Mac" Long). Audrey likes him, but he goes for
the buxom Calista, and Audrey pines away... until she gives in, of course.
The end result of this affair is hardly satisfying, and that's unfortunate:
Dreamland has a hazy beauty to it and some interesting characters (Mookie
excepted) driving the story. It all amounts to much ado about nothing --
absolutely nothing, really -- except that maybe, just maybe, Audrey will
finally grow up and move on with her life.
It's a long way to go for such a tepid lesson.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





