Sideways (Full Screen Edition)
by Alexander Payne Model 20th Century FoxAverage Rating: 
List Price: $14.98 / Sale Price: $13.49
From the Editors
ACADEMY AWARD WINNER BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY WINNER OF 2 GOLDEN GLOBES, INCLUDING BEST PICTURE (COMEDY / MUSICAL) <P>In this intoxicating, intelligent comedy, director Alexander Payne (Election, About Schmidt) serves up "one of the best movies of the year" (Entertainment Weekly) about the ups, downs and sideways journeys of life. A wine-tasting road trip through California's famed Central Coast takes an unexpected detour as Miles (Paul Giamatti) and Jack (Thomas Haden Church) hit the gas en route to their mid-life crisis. The comically mismatched pair soon find themselves drowning in wine, women... and laughter!
Description
Customer Response
3.5 stars out of 4
The Bottom Line:
One of the more successful blends of laughs and pathos to come out of Hollywood in the last few years, Sideways lures viewers in with its (very funny) comedy and leaves them with its suprisingly-moving drama
Making fun of people who aren't funny:
The characters in this movie demonstrate drinking, smoking, taking drugs (prescription) and promiscuity. I do none of these things, and after watching this movie I would be in no hurry to start.
I enjoyed the acting. I loved how the actors - all of them - portrayed their individual characters. I loved listening to the way they spoke their lines and timed their facial expressions: Outstanding talent.
A similar movie could be made without the excessive drinking and without the other "bad habits" and it would be a better film for many people. These 'depravities' were not the reasons why the movie succeeded. In fact, many will have to "suffer indignities" in order to appreciate the underlying humor.
Watching the characters act in group settings, and then alone or in one-on-one settings, was the foundation of the humor. The contrast between how polite, charming and intelligent the characters strove to be when in the company of others, and their genuine thoughts and feelings apart from any company was amusing, to me.
I loved Virginia Madsen and her portrayal of "Maya." Maya's interest in Miles seems to be a fantasy of the author - the real-life Miles. But I sure enjoyed Virginia Madsen's portrayal of a remarkable woman showing interest in a rather pathetic man (and no, I'm not that either).
Scenes with the female characters apart from the male characters (showing the same contrast mentioned above) would have improved the movie.
Good film
Sideways was a 2004 sleeper comedy hit by director Alexander Payne that really deserved its plaudits. He previously made the funny Reese Witherspoon comedy Election and the so-so Jack Nicholson film About Schmidt. The film's title comes from the proper way to store a bottle of wine, as well the angle a drunk sees the world from when he's recovering from passing out on the floor. While not a particularly deep film, and at two hours and four minutes in length it is about a half an hour too long, the film nonetheless does provide some insights into male insecurities and mid-life crises, as it celebrates human foibles in an intelligent manner. It was adapted by Payne and Jim Taylor from an unpublished novel by a writer named Rex Pickett, and won a well deserved Oscar for Best Adapted Screenplay.
The film follows in a long tradition of buddy comedies, from the silent era, wherein one guy is a good fellow, and the other is his ne'er do well pal. Basically, a week before the bad pal, his ex-college roommate, Jack (Thomas Haden Church), a failed actor, is to get married, his good pal, Miles (Paul Giamatti), a divorced school teacher of English, and an aspiring novelist, plans to take him on a week's getaway to the California wine country, to relax and play golf.... the film is a ray of hope for viewers who want intelligent films, especially comedies, from someone not named Woody Allen. Payne was quoted as saying, in an online interview: `I want Sideways, which has no movie stars in it, and a movie for which I had final cut, to make money, not just for my own career but for other film makers so that film makers and studios can point, if I didn't have stars to make money, Sideways didn't have a gun or a chase even though that made money, we have to be changing our cinema, little by little and have more human films. But the only way it's going to happen is there are examples they can point to, where they made money. It was just like that in the late 60s and 70s. Look, Easy Rider made money, The Graduate made money, Midnight Cowboy made money, and we should make more movies like those. That's what we need.'
He's right, of course. Here's hoping that he has a long career of such hits as Sideways, but that he only gets better with each succeeding film.
One Great Inside Joke
Sideways is a buddy movie about two flawed buddies who go off on a wine-tasting adventure in lieu of a bachelor party. The story is more melancholic than comic as the buddies each bump up against their disappointments and failures.
There are lots of reasons to watch this film. The acting is masterful, Sandra Oh is delectable and the scenery is-for most of us-a delight.What sets this movie up for a special place in my heart is one great wine joke.
There's a scene in the beginning where Miles (Paul Giamatti) carries on at some length about Merlot and his dislike of it. It's a rant that I've seen imitated a few times. At the very end of the movie, Miles decides to drink the one great bottle of wine that he's been saving for ' a special occasion'. He's depressed at the time (Miles is depressed a lot) and so he takes it to a fast food joint and drinks it with a Wiftyburger or whatever they call 'em. As he pulls the wine out of the bag, we get a quick peek at the label. It's a fabled Bordeaux called Cheval Blanc. You won't find this information on the label, but wine insiders know that one of the dominant grapes in that wine is.....yup, Merlot.
Lynn Hoffman author ofThe New Short Course in Wine
Lost in American Suburbia. Brilliant work from director Alexander Payne...
What a marvelous film. The latest, brilliant work from director Alexander Payne, who once again finds the empty, lonely heart at the center of so much American life. I have watched it many times, and still find wonderful things in the performances of Paul Giamatti, Thomas Haden Church, Virginia Madsen and Sandra Oh (Mrs Payne at the time the film was made).
All the characters in Payne films share the prospect of being trapped in shallow roles and jobs they have accepted in suburban American life. They yearn to, if only for a second, or a weekend, escape from or rise above the tedium of their existence. It's no accident of course that his most memorable protagonists have included middle school teachers (Election and Sideways) and an insurance company drone (About Schmidt).
To the reviewer who wrote:
"I felt such raw hate for it that I had to buy it - 1) because it elicited such strong disgust and abject hatred and 2) because I am happy to have found a movie that perfectly exemplifies just how terrible, inferior, and worthless a movie can possibly be."
All I can say is: you sound just like a character in a Alexander Payne movie!
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