Nights in Rodanthe Movie Review
Nights in Rodanthe Review

"Nights in Rodanthe" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : George C. WolfeProducer : Alison Greenspan,Doug Claybourne,Dana Goldberg
Screenwiter : John Romano,Ann Peacock,Nicholas Sparks
Starring : Richard Gere,Diane Lane,Christopher Meloni,Scott Glenn,Viola Davis,Mae Whitman
With the Gulf Coast narrowly dodging Gustav and the Houston area recuperating
from Ike, now might not be the best time for a breathy romance that uses the
violent lashing of a vicious hurricane to simulate foreplay between passionate
lovers.
It's hard to fault director George C. Wolfe, however. His Nights in Rodanthe
adaptation merely adheres to a blueprint provided by best-selling author
Nicholas Sparks, who makes use of a tempest in his source novel but also
provides earnest human connections and palpable heartache.
As the story goes, frazzled divorcee Adrienne Willis (Diane Lane) agrees to
watch her best friend's oceanfront bed-and-breakfast -- situated on North
Carolina's scenic coastline -- so she can escape her unfaithful ex (Christopher
Meloni), a weekend dad who wants back in the family fold. Despite the threat of
that aforementioned hurricane, Adrienne has one guest at the inn. Dr. Paul
Flanner (Richard Gere) has traveled to Rodanthe from Raleigh to counsel the
family of a deceased patient. As the storm tears at the B&B, Adrienne and Paul
allow their budding romance to patch their damaged souls.
Rodanthe walks a fine line between maudlin and sappy, but the performers
prevent it from ever plunging too far in either direction. Gere understands how
best to play a character saddled with an emotional burden. Lane reveals a
maternal side, displaying care and sympathetic concern even in her most
passionate moments. Rodanthe is far less steamy than Adrian Lyne's 2002
thriller Unfaithful, the last film to pair Gere with Lane (or, more accurately,
drive them apart).
Sparks' loyal readers know that a third-act tragedy looms, and those who've
read Rodanthe are prepared for the inevitable rug pull. I'm unfamiliar with how
faithful Wolfe stays to Sparks' text, so I'll comment only by saying Rodanthe
dabbles in love that's characterized by the ache of separation, and how those
feelings can stop a lover's heart.
Which is why the knockout blow belongs to Scott Glenn, who delivers a gut-punch
of mournful anguish as the husband of Gere's patient who can't accept the fact
that his wife is gone. The hurt that lingered in Glenn's sorrowful eyes
lingered with me long after the rest of Rodanthe had faded away.
Why so blue?
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Review by Sean O'Connell
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