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Sunchaser

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Director
  
Michael Cimino

Initial DVD release
  
October 13, 2009

Duration
  

Country
  
United States

6.2/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Crime, Drama

Music director
  
Maurice Jarre

Writer
  
Charles Leavitt

Language
  
English

Sunchaser movie poster

Release date
  
May 29, 1996 (1996-05-29) (France) September 27, 1996 (1996-09-27) (U.S.)

Cast
  
Woody Harrelson
(Dr. Michael Reynolds),
Talisa Soto
(Navajo Woman),
Anne Bancroft
(Dr. Renata Baumbauer),
Jon Seda
(Brandon 'Blue' Monroe),
Alexandra Tydings
(Victoria Reynolds)

Similar movies
  
Fargo
,
Let's Be Cops
,
12 Years a Slave
,
A Life Less Ordinary
,
Taken 2
,
Unknown

Tagline
  
It began as a kidnapping. It became a journey of hope.

The sunchaser 1996 official trailer woody harrelson anne bancroft movie hd


Sunchaser (titled on-screen as The Sunchaser) is a 1996 film directed by Michael Cimino and starring Woody Harrelson, Jon Seda and Anne Bancroft. It was director Cimino's last feature-length film.

Contents

Sunchaser movie scenes

The sunchaser 1996 trailer


Plot summary

Sunchaser movie scenes

"Blue" Monroe (played by Seda) is a 16-year-old juvenile offender (convicted of murdering an abusive stepfather) who is dying of abdominal cancer. Dr. Michael Reynolds (played by Harrelson) is Blue's rich, self-absorbed oncologist.

Sunchaser wwwgstaticcomtvthumbdvdboxart28843p28843d

During a medical visit, Blue discovers that he has only a month to live and decides to escape. He kidnaps Dr. Reynolds and forces him to drive to Arizona to visit a mountain lake sacred to the Navajo people. The trip forces both to confront their sense-of-self and life choices.

Cast

  • Woody Harrelson - Dr. Michael Reynolds
  • Jon Seda - Brandon 'Blue' Monroe
  • Anne Bancroft - Dr. Renata Baumbauer
  • Alexandra Tydings - Victoria Reynolds
  • Matt Mulhern - Dr. Chip Byrnes
  • Talisa Soto - Navajo Woman
  • Richard Bauer - Dr. Bradford
  • Victor Aaron - Webster Skyhorse
  • Lawrence Pressman - Agent in Charge Collier
  • Michael O'Neill - Agent Moreland
  • Harry Carey Jr. - Cashier
  • Carmen Dell'Orefice - Arabella
  • Brooke Ashley - Calantha Reynolds
  • Andrea Roth - Head Nurse
  • Bob Minor - Deputy Lynch
  • Brett Harrelson - Younger Highway Patrol Officer
  • Andy Berman - Person in Oncology
  • Production

    Mickey Rourke, collaborator and friend of Cimino, believes the director “snapped” sometime during the making of The Sunchaser. “Michael is the sort of person that if you take away his money he short-circuits,” Rourke says. “He is a man of honor.” Rourke did not say how or why Cimino “snapped.”

    Joe D’Augustine, the film's editor, recalls his first meeting with Cimino: “It was kind of eerie, freaky. I was led into this dark editing room with black velvet curtains and there was this guy hunched over. They bring me into, like, his chamber, as if he was the Pope. Everyone was speaking in hushed tones. He had something covering his face, a handkerchief. He kept his face covered. And nobody was allowed to take his picture [...] Welcome to Ciminoville.”

    Release

    A theatrical release was intended but the film fared poorly enough with test audiences to go straight to video in the United States. The film was entered into competition at the 1996 Cannes Film Festival where it was nominated for the Palme D'Or.

    Critical reception

    The film received largely negative reviews. Todd McCarthy of Variety wrote, "Michael Cimino's return to filmmaking after a six-year layoff is a conceptually bold tale marked, in its execution, both by visceral intensity and dramatic sloppiness." Jo-Ann Pittman wrote in Film Directors that Sunchaser had "a predictable and often laughable script. Not good considering it is a drama. The characters are stereotypical and the story again lacks direction. It attempts to handle too many stories at one time. The New Age mystical healing waters are cliche as is the kidnapper/victim story." Leonard Maltin gave the film one and a half stars: "Misbegotten mess tries to touch all trendy bases, scrambling American Indian mysticism, 'New Age' theories and buddy-movie clichés into the format of a road movie."

    Kevin Thomas of Los Angeles Times gave Sunchaser one of its few positive notices. While noting the predictability of the script, Thomas added, "Yet all that's so familiar in Charles Leavitt's script has been given a fresh, brisk spin by the sheer audacity and force of Cimino's style and by an incisive, wide-ranging performance by Harrelson..."

    References

    Sunchaser Wikipedia
    Sunchaser IMDb Sunchaser themoviedb.org