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Synopsis:
The misadventures begin when Miles (PAUL GIAMATTI), an un-recovered divorcÉ and would-be novelist with a wine fixation, decides to gift old college buddy and washed-up actor Jack (THOMAS HADEN CHURCH) with a celebratory trip to the vineyards of the Santa Ynez Valley the week before Jack's wedding. The two couldn't be an odder couple. Jack is an over-sexed charmer; Miles is a sad-sack worrier. Jack is looking for his last taste of freedom; Miles just wants to taste perfection in a bottle. Jack is fine with cheap Merlot; Miles pines for the elusive, perfect Pinot. Indeed, the only thing they seem to share in common is the same heady mix of failed ambitions and fading youth. And yet, as they make their way up the coast, Miles and Jack soon find themselves drowning in wine and women. Jack falls head-over-heels for a local wine pourer (SANDRA OH) and threatens to call off his nuptials. Miles begins his own romantic encounter with a wine-savvy waitress (VIRGINIA MADSEN). Both men careen dangerously and comically toward mid-life crises. Now, the wedding approaches and with it the certainty that Miles and Jack won't make it back to Los Angeles unscathed or unchanged . . . if they get back there at all.
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Screen Format: Color
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CRITIC REVIEWS
Lew Irwin

Sideways, which thus far has garnered the lion's share of best film accolades from critics groups, has received virtually unanimous praise from critics individually. Manohla Dargis in the New York Times writes that the emergence of [director Alexander] Payne into the front ranks of American filmmakers isn't just cause for celebration; it's a reason for hope. Roger Ebert in the Chicago Sun-Times uses the term lovable to describe the film and writes that Payne, who also co-wrote the screenplay from a novel by Rex Pickett, finds plots that service his characters, instead of limiting them. The characters are played not by the first actors you would think of casting, but by actors who will prevent you from ever being able to imagine anyone else in their roles. Philip Wuntch of the Dallas Morning News comments: Any way you look at Sideways, it's a winner. As character study, as exercise in American ambience or simply as an entertaining movie, Sideways triumphs. And Kenneth Turan in the Los Angeles Times finds the film completely satisfying ... consistently amusing ... something to be cherished like the delicate Santa Ynez Valley wines that are the story's vivid backdrop. [The Los Angeles Times on Monday took the unusual step of offering an Op Ed review of the movie by maverick L.A. writer Burt Prelutsky, who remarked that the movie is the most over-hyped commodity since Enron. He concludes: I do have a theory as to why the critics all went gaga over this thing. One, I think it's a natural reaction to a movie that isn't filled with a hundred million dollars' worth of special effects; two, they wish to be seen as encouraging a writer-director who is more interested in depicting people than he is in exploding cars; three, they didn't want to admit that the best movie of the year -- once again -- was an animated feature, <

Reviewed by: mobius27 on 9/20/2008 7:15:43 PM
Honestly, I don't know what people saw in this movie. There's only so long you can watch annoying people talk pretentiously about wine before you want to claw your eyes out.
Lew Irwin

Sideways, which thus far has garnered the lion's share of best film accolades from critics groups, has received virtually unanimous praise from critics individually. Manohla Dargis in the New York Times writes that the emergence of [director Alexander] Payne into the front ranks of American filmmakers isn't just cause for celebration; it's a reason for hope. Roger Ebert in the Chicago Sun-Times uses the term lovable to describe the film and writes that Payne, who also co-wrote the screenplay from a novel by Rex Pickett, finds plots that service his characters, instead of limiting them. The characters are played not by the first actors you would think of casting, but by actors who will prevent you from ever being able to imagine anyone else in their roles. Philip Wuntch of the Dallas Morning News comments: Any way you look at Sideways, it's a winner. As character study, as exercise in American ambience or simply as an entertaining movie, Sideways triumphs. And Kenneth Turan in the Los Angeles Times finds the film completely satisfying ... consistently amusing ... something to be cherished like the delicate Santa Ynez Valley wines that are the story's vivid backdrop. [The Los Angeles Times on Monday took the unusual step of offering an Op Ed review of the movie by maverick L.A. writer Burt Prelutsky, who remarked that the movie is the most over-hyped commodity since Enron. He concludes: I do have a theory as to why the critics all went gaga over this thing. One, I think it's a natural reaction to a movie that isn't filled with a hundred million dollars' worth of special effects; two, they wish to be seen as encouraging a writer-director who is more interested in depicting people than he is in exploding cars; three, they didn't want to admit that the best movie of the year -- once again -- was an animated feature, The Incredibles.]
Reviewed by: mobius27 on 9/20/2008 7:15:43 PM
Honestly, I don't know what people saw in this movie. There's only so long you can watch annoying people talk pretentiously about wine before you want to claw your eyes out.
Sideways has 5 user ratings.
Customer Reviews for
Sideways
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Reviewed by: mobius27 on 9/20/2008 7:15:43 PM
Honestly, I don't know what people saw in this movie. There's only so long you can watch annoying people talk pretentiously about wine before you want to claw your eyes out.
(Read More Customer Reviews...)Reviewed by: deonys on 2/21/2008 9:05:17 AM
Reviewed by: scarolan on 6/20/2005 5:11:40 PM
While the mother-in-law wasn't too hot on it, but my wife and I (early 30's) thought it was great and I laughed until I cried at one part.Great for an age group where a lot of friends are getting married perhaps.
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