ANYWHERE BUT HERE
A pair of dazzling lead performances by two of the best Oscar-winning actresses in the business are the primary attraction of a 1999 comedy-drama called Anywhere But Here that provides consistent entertainment thanks to its stars.

Adele (Susan Sarandon) is the divorced mother of Ann (Natalie Portman) who has decided to give up her life in a fictional east coast town called Bay City and start a new life in Beverly Hills where she has announced that she has a teaching position (but doesn't) and has decided that Ann is going to change her name to Heather and become an actress.

We've seen flashes of other famous movie heroines in our girls, Adele in particular. Adele is flighty, self-absorbed, is constantly trying to live above her means, and thinks any problem can be solved with a trip to Baskin Robbins. Ann is a sensitive realist who is pretty much humiliated by every move her mother makes and spends most of the screentime threatening to leave her mother and never come back. Anyone who has seen movies like The Glass Menagerie, Mermaids, Gypsy, and Terms of Endearment will find familiar territory here, but the territory looks fresh because of the work of these two extraordinary actresses.

We know we are in for something kind of special when the movie opens with Adele and Ann on the road and instead of the accustomed broken down Cadillac we usually see in road movies, our heroines are traveling in a very expensive looking Mercedes. Few surprises are provided in terms of storytelling, including Ann's slightly pretentious and unnecessary narration, but we see the constant challenge and competition in this relationship and though the idea of who's the mother and daughter is approached, it is always clear who the mother is here and who the daughter is though both characters experience discomfort and aggravation in their positions, they accept them and no matter what conflicts they face, we know that these two will always choose each other, even though they are in serious denial about it.

The rather ordinary story is a non-issue because Sarandon and Portman are so completely enchanting in their roles that you almost don't notice the other not-so-spectacular elements of presentation. I did like Shawn Hatosy as Ann's Bay City boyfriend, Eileen Ryan as Adele's mother, and John Diehl as her brother, but it is the professional polish of Susan Sarandon and Natalie Portman that makes this one worth a look.
A pair of dazzling lead performances by two of the best Oscar-winning actresses in the business are the primary attraction of a 1999 comedy-drama called Anywhere But Here that provides consistent entertainment thanks to its stars.

Adele (Susan Sarandon) is the divorced mother of Ann (Natalie Portman) who has decided to give up her life in a fictional east coast town called Bay City and start a new life in Beverly Hills where she has announced that she has a teaching position (but doesn't) and has decided that Ann is going to change her name to Heather and become an actress.

We've seen flashes of other famous movie heroines in our girls, Adele in particular. Adele is flighty, self-absorbed, is constantly trying to live above her means, and thinks any problem can be solved with a trip to Baskin Robbins. Ann is a sensitive realist who is pretty much humiliated by every move her mother makes and spends most of the screentime threatening to leave her mother and never come back. Anyone who has seen movies like The Glass Menagerie, Mermaids, Gypsy, and Terms of Endearment will find familiar territory here, but the territory looks fresh because of the work of these two extraordinary actresses.

We know we are in for something kind of special when the movie opens with Adele and Ann on the road and instead of the accustomed broken down Cadillac we usually see in road movies, our heroines are traveling in a very expensive looking Mercedes. Few surprises are provided in terms of storytelling, including Ann's slightly pretentious and unnecessary narration, but we see the constant challenge and competition in this relationship and though the idea of who's the mother and daughter is approached, it is always clear who the mother is here and who the daughter is though both characters experience discomfort and aggravation in their positions, they accept them and no matter what conflicts they face, we know that these two will always choose each other, even though they are in serious denial about it.

The rather ordinary story is a non-issue because Sarandon and Portman are so completely enchanting in their roles that you almost don't notice the other not-so-spectacular elements of presentation. I did like Shawn Hatosy as Ann's Bay City boyfriend, Eileen Ryan as Adele's mother, and John Diehl as her brother, but it is the professional polish of Susan Sarandon and Natalie Portman that makes this one worth a look.
Last edited by Gideon58; 02-05-25 at 02:18 PM.