Winter Solstice Movie Review
Winter Solstice Review
"Winter Solstice" Overview

Rating: R
2004
Cast and Crew
Director : Josh SternfeldProducer : Don Bernheim,John Limotte
Screenwiter : Josh Sternfeld
Starring : Anthony LaPaglia,Aaron Stanford,Mark Webber,Allison Janney,Ron Livingston,Michelle Monaghan,Brandon Sexton III
The plot in Winter Solstice is more of a subplot, never mind a feature length
movie. And that’s one of the many problems in writer/director Josh Sternfeld’s
sluggish account of a New Jersey family under stress.
Anthony LaPaglia plays Jim Winters, a widower living with his two sons, Gabe
(Aaron Stanford), a hard-working young man; and Pete (Mark Webber), a teenager
who can’t get his act together. The three are a tight unit, but the bond
between them strains when Gabe suddenly announces he’s moving to Florida and
Pete faces yet another stint at summer school.
Also thrown into the mix is a new neighbor, a fortysomething single played by
Allison Janney, whom Jim, still living with the memory of his dead wife, gets
to know better; and Pete’s with-it summer school teacher (a misused Ron
Livingston), who appears to have wandered in from the set of Boston Public.
Stuck in the same sleepy town — Jim refers to the Dairy Queen as the town’s
“community center” — the talented cast acts as if they’re stuck in a
93-minute-long detention. The minimalist dialogue is supposed to show that
communication is both understood and hard to come by in the Winters’ household,
but Sternfeld overstresses this awkward balance — Jim can speak to his sons
casually, but not when serious matters arise; Gabe’s parting with his Liv Tyler
clone of a girlfriend (Michelle Monaghan) is more difficult than expected; Pete
can’t talk to anybody — so the movie feels tiresome within 30 minutes. No one
in this town appears comfortable making more than a few terse comments. You can
certainly understand why Gabe wants to bolt for the sunnier climes of Florida,
even though he doesn’t have a plan.
Sternfeld is also adrift. The last couple of years have seen an influx of
movies mixed with small-town despair and youthful boredom (Garden State, All
the Real Girls, Raising Victor Vargas, etc.). Regardless of quality, those
movies had a distinctive style, a narrative viewpoint. Sternfeld’s choice is to
do nothing. He incorrectly assumes that the small-town locale (we get lots of
shots of that) and the characters’ world-weary gloominess can coast the movie
toward respectability and serve as an explanation to everyone’s problems, when
its “this is real life” feel is really obvious, really grating, and really
unoriginal. And it’s a cop out, an easy way to justify an artistic style, while
not committing effort to anything else. The case that we’re supposed to observe
what’s onscreen is moot: We’ve seen the same material in umpteen other films,
and we’ve learned everything about the characters during the first third of the
movie.
I’m not suggesting that Sternfeld should employ the same razzle dazzle editing
and camera work Zach Braff used in Garden State, but he has to justify why we
should invest our time in Jim’s family and their problems. What’s onscreen
doesn’t help. From a distance, middle class woes may make for credible,
authentic filmmaking. It’s posing when little effort is invested into the
concept.
Reviewer: Pete Croatto





