
Pleasantville had to be one of the biggest surprises I've ever had at the movies. This is a movie that constantly flies in the face of cinematic normality,defying all the rules of big screen storytelling and making us accept everything that us going on.
This superbly mounted and completely winning fantasy starred Toby Maguire and Reese Witherspoon as a contemporary teenage brother and sister who are magically transported into a black and white television show called "Pleasantville", a show similar to "Leave it to Beaver" or "The Andy Griffith Show", where everyone in the town knows each other, where the fire department only saves cats from trees and where there are no pages in books or toilets in bathrooms.
Maguire's character is a "Pleasantville" trivia expert so he knows everyone there and everything that's going to happen but sis Witherspoon is a stranger in a strange land whose introduction of 1990's sensibilities to the citizens of this town brings about extraordinary change. What is interesting is the interaction between Maguire and Witherspoon with the characters from the sitcom and how some citizens are open to the changes that are going on and how some aren't.
The film is beautifully made (the art direction, set direction, and cinematography are Oscar-worthy). The integration of color and black and white photography is absolutely glorious. The film also possesses a very smart screenplay and superb performances, the best of which is by Joan Allen, who is luminous as Betty, the mother in the sitcom who is shocked at first but learns to accept the 1990's coming to Pleasantville.
Yes, it may borrow from other movies, but there is a freshness and originality to this movie that is most engaging and anytime with Don Knotts is time well spent.
Last edited by Gideon58; 07-05-16 at 06:03 PM.