Film Snail

The Man in the Moon
The Man in the Moon

7.4

The Man in the Moon

PG-13·1991·99m

Summary

Maureen Trant and her younger sibling Dani share a strong connection, but local boy Court Foster threatens to throw their bond off balance. Dani and Court meet first and have a flirtatious rapport -- but when he meets Maureen, he falls hard and they begin a passionate affair. The new couple try to keep their love hidden from Dani, but she soon learns the truth, disavowing her sister. But a heartbreaking accident later reunites the girls.

Crew

Director

Robert Mulligan

Writer

Jenny Wingfield

Reviews

Wuchak

Wuchak

August 13, 2021

8

_**Two sisters growing up in the Deep South in the late 50s**_

During the summer of ’57 in rural Louisiana a 14 year-old girl (Reese Witherspoon) and her older sister (Emily Warfield) maneuver through the challenges of family, boys, responsibilities and more. Sam Waterston and Tess Harper play the parents while Jason London appears as a new neighbor that attracts the attention of the younger sibling.

“The Man in the Moon” (1991) is a coming-of-age drama in the South in the mold of “Ode to Billy Joe” (1976), “The Great Santini” (1979), “My Girl” (1991), “Lawn Dogs” (1997) and “Simon Birch” (1998). It’s as good, or better, than the best of those. Reese was 14 at the time of shooting and this was her feature film debut.

The movie’s full of gems relating to relationships, spirituality, tragedies, forgiveness and growth. ’Nuff said.

The film runs 1 hour, 39 minutes, and was shot in the heart of Louisiana: Natchitoches (the Trant house), Kisatchie (the swimming hole), Robeline (church scene), Chousatta (dance scene) and Many (store scene).

GRADE: A-

Media

Status:

Released

Original Language:

English

Budget:

$1,237,669.00

Revenue:

$2,853,801.00

Keywords

sibling relationship
louisiana
coming of age
skinny dipping
first love
tractor accident
1950s
sister sister relationship