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Far and Away and Cocoon Wikipedia film pages







Far and Away
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Not to be confused with Far Away (disambiguation).

Far and Away
Far and away ver1.jpg
Theatrical release poster

Directed by
Ron Howard
Produced by
Ron Howard
Brian Grazer
Bob Dolman
Screenplay by
Bob Dolman
Story by
Ron Howard
 Bob Dolman
Starring
Tom Cruise
Nicole Kidman
Music by
John Williams
Cinematography
Mikael Salomon
Editing by
Daniel P. Hanley
Mike Hill
Studio
Imagine Entertainment
Distributed by
Universal Pictures
Release dates
May 22, 1992
Running time
176 minutes
Country
United States
Language
English
Budget
$60 million[1]
Box office
$137,783,840
Far and Away is a 1992 adventure-drama-romance film directed by Ron Howard from a script by Howard and Bob Dolman, and stars Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman. Cinematography by Mikael Salomon, with a music score by John Williams. It was screened out of competition at the 1992 Cannes Film Festival.[2]
Cruise and Kidman play Irish immigrants seeking their fortune in 1890s America, eventually taking part in the Land Run of 1893.[3][4]
The film was advertised as being the first movie to be filmed in 70mm since David Lean's 1970 film Ryan's Daughter, although the film was not shot entirely in 70mm; that distinction would go to Kenneth Branagh's Hamlet.
This was Cyril Cusack's final acting role before his death the following year.


Contents  [hide]
1 Plot
2 Cast
3 Soundtrack
4 Reception
5 References
6 External links

Plot[edit]


 This article's plot summary may be too long or excessively detailed. Please help improve it by removing unnecessary details and making it more concise. (November 2013)
Hot-headed young Joseph Donnelly (Cruise), whose family home in Ireland was burned down by the landlord's men because of unpaid rent after his father's violent death, attempts revenge on the landlord, Daniel Christie (Robert Prosky), but is discovered and injured by Daniel's daughter Shannon (Kidman). In a second attempt to kill the landlord, his rifle backfires, injuring him. Held captive while the Christies treat his wounds, Joseph tries to escape but is caught by Stephen Chase (Thomas Gibson), Daniel's arrogant manager, who had earlier burned the Donnelly house. Shannon, object of Stephen's affections, has rebelled against family tradition and made plans to claim free land in America. She offers to take Joseph with her as her "servant" so she, a single woman, can travel with the safety of a male companion without scandal. Joseph agrees, convinced he can also stake a land claim, and the pair head for the port and a ship.
On the ship, Shannon meets a seemingly kindly man named McGuire, who warns her that the free land is very far away in Oklahoma. She explains that her collection of valuable silver spoons will cover all expenses, and he offers to help her find a shop where she can sell them. Arriving in Boston, McGuire is shot in the street, and Shannon sees her spoons fall out of his clothing and get snatched up by passersby. Joseph rescues her but not the spoons. A worker of Ward Boss Mike Kelly, a leader in the Irish immigrant community, takes them to him. Kelly finds them lodging and jobs, but only one room, which they must share. To avoid scandal, Joseph says she's his sister.
Joseph and Shannon become attracted to each other, but both keep up a front of indifference. One night, after peeking at Shannon undressing, Joseph finds himself sexually frustrated and rushes out to Boss Kelly's club, where a barehanded boxing match is underway. Joseph challenges the winner, knocks him out, and soon becomes a regular boxing attraction at the club, greatly increasing his income. Meanwhile, back in Ireland, the Christie house is burned down by angry tenants in the Irish Land War, so the Christies, with Stephen, decide to emigrate to America, hoping also to find their daughter.
Seeing Joseph greatly expanding his wardrobe with his winnings, Shannon questions his sincerity about their Oklahoma land quest and confronts him. He replies angrily that he easily earns more money boxing than she could ever dream to. She retorts she could earn just as much and leaves. Later, unable to find her, Joseph is told she is at Kelly's club, where he has an important fight scheduled against an Italian immigrant. Rushing to the club, he discovers Shannon on stage as a burlesque dancer. He tries to cover her with his jacket, demanding that she stop dancing. The Irish men surrounding the couple beg him to fight and offer him a small fortune ($200). Shannon, who previously scorned boxing, urges him to fight, since the money would get them to Oklahoma. Joseph agrees and is winning until he notices one of his backers (a member of the city council) groping Shannon on his lap. Joseph pushes through the crowd to free her, but is pushed back into the ring, where his foot accidentally "toes" the line, falsely signaling he is ready to begin fighting. But he isn't ready, and the Italian lands a "sucker" punch, disorienting him, after which he's soon beaten.
In retaliation for the hundreds of dollars Joseph's boxing loss has cost Boss Kelly and his friends, Joseph and Shannon are thrown out of their room and jobs at the chicken plucking factory. Kelly issues orders to the neighborhood that nobody is to help them in any way. Their valuables having been stolen from their room by Kelly's thugs, they're left to wander the snowy streets.
Cold and famished, the pair enter a seemingly abandoned luxurious house. Joseph encourages Shannon to pretend the house is hers and he is her servant, but she begs him to pretend they are married and the house is theirs. During that tender moment, the owners of the house return and chase them away, shooting Shannon in the back. Joseph brings Shannon to the Christies, newly arrived from Ireland. He decides Shannon will be better cared for by them, and leaves despite his obvious feelings for her.
Joseph finds work laying track on a railroad, seemingly abandoning his dream of owning land, but is reminded by his father in a dream of the land. Told a wagon train he sees out the door of his boxcar is heading for the Oklahoma land rush, Joseph suddenly abandons the railroad and joins the wagons, arriving in Oklahoma Territory just in time for the Land Run of 1893.
Joseph finds Shannon, Stephen, and the Christies already in Oklahoma. Stephen, having seen Joseph talking to Shannon, warns him that he will kill him if he goes near Shannon again. Joseph buys a horse for the land rush that dies in a few hours from extreme old age and is forced to ride an unruly second one he manages to tame. On this horse he quickly outpaces everybody and catches up with Shannon and Stephen, having discovered that Stephen cheated by illegally inspecting the territory before the race and is headed for extremely desirable land he found. When Shannon falls off her horse and Joseph goes to help her, Stephen attempts to shoot him, but the prizefighter prevails.
Having found the desirable land, Joseph is ready to plant his claim flag in the ground, when Stephen rushes over and starts another fight in which Joseph falls to the ground and is crushed by a horse. Shannon rushes to his side and finally rejects Stephen when he questions her actions. Stephen leaves and Shannon is left to try to keep Joseph alive. Joseph finally confesses that he loves her, and without her, the land that was so important to him means nothing. He seems to die, and Shannon mourns, crying over his body. She tells him that she had always loved him, from the first moment she saw him. This suddenly revives him (recalling a similar revival at the death of Joseph's father). They happily drive their flag into the ground and claim their prized land together.
Cast[edit]
Tom Cruise as Joseph Donnelly
Nicole Kidman as Shannon Christie
Thomas Gibson as Stephen Chase
Robert Prosky as Daniel Christie
Barbara Babcock as Nora Christie
Cyril Cusack as Danty Duff
Eileen Pollock as Molly Kay
Colm Meaney as Kelly
Douglas Gillison as Dermody
Michelle Johnson as Grace
Clint Howard as Flynn
Marlon Castellon as Jim Claymore
Rance Howard as Tomlin
Niall Tóibín as Joseph Donnelly's father
Allan Stapleton as Child running in background
Soundtrack[edit]

Far and Away

Film score by John Williams

Released
26 May 1992
Recorded
1992
Genre
Soundtrack
Length
67:12

Professional ratings

Review scores

Source
Rating
Filmtracks 5/5 stars [5]
The music to Far and Away was composed and conducted by legendary composer John Williams. The score, a mixture of traditional Irish instrumentation and conventional orchestra, prominently featured performances by the Irish musical group The Chieftains and a revision of the song "Book of Days" composed and performed by Enya. The soundtrack was released 26 May 1992 through MCA Records and features 19 tracks of music at a running time just over sixty-seven minutes.[6]
1."County Galway, June 1892" (1:55)
2."The Fighting Donellys" (2:18) – featured performance by The Chieftains
3."Joe Sr.'s Passing/The Duel Scene" (4:41)
4."Leaving Home" (1:55)
5."Burning the Manor House" (2:43)
6."Blowing Off Steam" (1:31)
7."Fighting for Dough" (2:02) – featured performance by The Chieftains
8."Am I Beautiful?" (3:38)
9."The Big Match" (5:56)
10."Inside the Mansion" (4:24)
11."Shannon is Shot" (4:06)
12."Joseph's Dream" (3:08)
13."The Reunion" (3:50)
14."Oklahoma Territory" (2:12)
15."The Land Race" (4:56)
16."Settling with Steven/The Race to the River" (4:08)
17."Joseph and Shannon" (3:14)
18."Book of Days" (2:53) – composed and performed by Enya
19."End Credits" (6:35) – featured performance by The Chieftains
Reception[edit]
The film received mixed reviews from critics.[7][8][9][10] The movie, which cost $60 million to make, earned roughly $13 million on its first weekend and made a total of $58 million domestically (it also fared solidly abroad, with almost $79 million) and $137 million worldwide.[11][12][13] The film altogether made $166,694,840 from worldwide and home video rentals. Far and Away currently holds a 50% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 24 reviews. The film was nominated for a Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Original Song for the song Book of Days.
The film is rated M in Australia, however the rating was later changed to PG in New Zealand.
References[edit]
1.Jump up ^ Christon, Lawrence (1992-05-17). "Epic Picture, Epic Dreams : Ron Howard & Co. go all-out in making 'Far and Away,' a $60-million historical romance, and then marketing it against action sequels". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2010-12-08.
2.Jump up ^ "Festival de Cannes: Far and Away". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 2009-08-17.
3.Jump up ^ Galbraith, Jane (1992-06-14). "A look inside Hollywood and the movies. : LEGAL DEPT. : Lawsuit, Lawsuit on the Range". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2010-12-08.
4.Jump up ^ Gerosa, Melina (1992-05-22). "Irish Risky". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 2010-12-08.
5.Jump up ^ Filmtracks review
6.Jump up ^ Far and Away soundtrack review at Filmtracks.com. Retrieved 2011-03-20.
7.Jump up ^ McCarthy, Todd (1992-05-10). "Far and Away". Variety. Retrieved 2010-12-08.
8.Jump up ^ "Far and Away". Washington Post. 1992-05-22. Retrieved 2010-12-08.
9.Jump up ^ "Far and Away". Chicago Sun Times. Retrieved 2010-12-08.
10.Jump up ^ "Far and Away". Entertainment Weekly. 2007-07-26. Retrieved 2010-12-08.
11.Jump up ^ Fox, David J. (1992-06-01). "'Lethal Weapon,' 'Sister Act' Pack a Sales Punch : Box office: The two films dominate weekend ticket action. But 'Far and Away,' starring Tom Cruise, lags behind.". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2011-01-12.
12.Jump up ^ Fox, David J. (1992-05-19). "'Lethal Weapon 3' Destroying Records". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2010-12-08.
13.Jump up ^ Far and Away (1992) - Box office / business
External links[edit]
Far and Away at the Internet Movie Database
Far and Away at the TCM Movie Database
Far and Away at TomCruise.com
Far and Away at allmovie
Far and Away at Box Office Mojo
Far and Away at Rotten Tomatoes


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Categories: English-language films
1992 films
American drama films
Epic films
1990s drama films
Films directed by Ron Howard
Films set in Oklahoma
Films set in 1893
Films shot in 70mm
Universal Pictures films
Imagine Entertainment films
1990s Western (genre) films







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Cocoon(film)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search


Cocoon
Cocoonposter.jpg
Theatrical release poster

Directed by
Ron Howard
Produced by
David Brown
Richard Zanuck
Screenplay by
Tom Benedek
Based on
Cocoon
by David Saperstein
Starring
Don Ameche
Wilford Brimley
Hume Cronyn
Brian Dennehy
Jack Gilford
Steve Guttenberg
Maureen Stapleton
Jessica Tandy
Gwen Verdon
Herta Ware
Tahnee Welch
Music by
James Horner
Cinematography
Donald Peterman[1]
Editing by
Daniel P. Hanley
Mike Hill
Distributed by
20th Century Fox
Release dates
June 21, 1985

Running time
117 minutes
Country
United States
Language
English
Budget
$17.5 million[2]
Box office
$85,313,124[3]
Cocoonis a 1985 science fiction filmdirected by Ron Howardabout a group of elderly people rejuvenated by aliens.[4][5]The movie stars Don Ameche, Wilford Brimley, Hume Cronyn, Brian Dennehy, Jack Gilford, Steve Guttenberg, Maureen Stapleton, Jessica Tandy, Gwen Verdon, Herta Ware, Tahnee Welch, and Linda Harrison. The film is loosely based on the novel by David Saperstein.
The movie was filmed in and around St. Petersburg, Florida: locations included the St Petersburg ShuffleboardClub, Sunny Shores Rest Home, The Coliseum, and Snell Arcadebuildings. The film earned two Academy Awardsfor Best Supporting Actor (Don Ameche) and for Best Visual Effects.
It spawned one sequel, Cocoon: The Return, in which almost all of the original cast reprised their roles.[6]


Contents [hide]
1Plot
2Cast
3Soundtrack
4Reception
5Awards
6References
7External links

Plot[edit]
About 10,000 years ago, peaceful aliens from the planet Antarea set up an outpost on the planet Earth, on an island later known to mankind as Atlantis. When Atlantis is destroyed, twenty aliens must be left behind. Antareans who return to pick them up disguise themselves as humans, rent a house with a swimming pool, and charge the water with "life force" to give the cocooned Antareans energy to survive the trip home. They charter a boat from a local captain named Jack (Steve Guttenberg) who helps them retrieve the cocoons.
Ben (Wilford Brimley), Arthur (Don Ameche) and Joe (Hume Cronyn), three local retirement homeresidents, swim in the pool and absorb some of the life force, making them feel younger and stronger. Eventually caught in the act, they are given permission to use the pool by the Antarean leader, Walter (Brian Dennehy). Their friend Bernie (Jack Gilford) obstinately refuses to use the healing power of the pool, and at the retirement home carelessly reveals the secret of the pool's rejuvenating powers. Joe also carelessly reveals it more by showing his capability in being able to knock out two retirement home managers trying to pull him away in his attempts to beat up Bernie over a personal insult he gives him about how his marriage is in jeopardy due to the consequences. In response to the fully revealed secret all the other elderly residents storm out of the retirement home and barge into the pool. Infuriated, Walter ejects them, but too many have been in the pool at once and drained its life force.
Walter explains that the cocoons cannot now survive the trip back to Antarea but will be able to survive on Earth. With the help of Jack, Ben, Arthur and Joe, the Antareans return the cocoons to the sea. The Antareans offer space aboard their ship to the old people. Bernie chooses to remain on Earth, but most of the others accept the invitation to travel to a world where they will never be ill, never age, and never die.
Cast[edit]
Don Amecheas Arthur 'Art' Selwyn
Wilford Brimleyas Ben Luckett
Hume Cronynas Joe Finley
Brian Dennehyas Walter, the leader of the Antereans
Jack Gilfordas Bernie Lefkowitz
Herta Wareas Rose Lefkowitz
Steve Guttenbergas Jack Bonner, owner of the boat that recovers the cocoons
Maureen Stapletonas Mary Luckett
Jessica Tandyas Alma Finley
Gwen Verdonas Bess McCarthy
Tahnee Welchas Kitty, an Anterean crewmember
Barret Oliveras David
Linda Harrisonas Susan
Tyrone Power Jr.as Pillsbury, an Anterean crewmember
Clint Howardas John Dexter
Jim Fitzpatrickas Tony
Charles Lampkinas Pops
Jorge Gil as Lou Pine
Rance Howardas St. Petersburg Detective
James Ritz as DMV Clerk
Casting for the film and its sequel were overseen by casting directorBeverly McDermott.[7]
Soundtrack[edit]

Cocoon

Film scoreby James Horner

Released
1985
September 1997
Recorded
1985
Genre
Soundtrack
Length
44:23

Professional ratings

Review scores

Source
Rating
Filmtracks 4/5 stars[8]
The score for Cocoonwas composed and conducted by James Horner. The soundtrack was released twice, through Polydor Recordsin 1985 and a reprint through P.E.G. in 1997 and features eleven tracks of score and a vocal track performed by Michael Sembello. Despite the reprint, it is still considered a rarity among soundtrack collectors.[9]
1."Through the Window" (2:54)
2."The Lovemaking" (4:21)
3."The Chase" (4:27)
4."Rose's Death" (2:10)
5."The Boys are Out" (2:35)
6."Returning to Sea" (4:13)
7."Gravity" (4:52) - written and performed by Michael Sembello
8."Discovered in the Poolhouse" (2:45)
9."First Tears" (1:49)
10."Sad Goodbyes" (2:22)
11."The Ascension" (5:55)
12."Theme from Cocoon" (6:03)
In 2013 Intradareleased an expanded and remastered edition.
1.Through The Window 2:58
2.Going To The Pool 1:55
3.Pool Is Closed 2:10
4.Mysterious Dive 1:54
5.Seduction / Let's Go 2:10
6.Unveiling 1:05
7.Discovered In The Poolhouse 2:47
8.A Relapse 1:27
9.The Lovemaking 4:24
10.First Tears 1:51
11.Rose's Death 2:14
12.Returning To Sea 4:16
13.Sad Goodbye 2:15
14.Sneaking Away 3:15
15.David Runs To The Boat 1:53
16.The Chase 4:30
17.The Ascension 6:01
18.Theme From Cocoon 6:05
19.The Boys Are Out 2:37
20.I Feel Great 1:05
21.Rock Source 1:13
22.Gravity 4:00

James Horner would return in 1988 to compose the score for Cocoon: The Return.
Howarddirected the music videofor "Gravity," and also has a cameo appearance as himself, investigating Michael Sembello's "disappearance." "Gravity" was Howard's first, and to date, only music video.[citation needed]
Reception[edit]
The film received mostly positive critical reception.[10][11][12]It holds a 80% "Fresh" rating on Rotten Tomatoes.[13]
Awards[edit]
Academy Awards
Best Actor in a Supporting Role, Don Amechein 1985[14][15]
Best Visual Effectsin 1985
Saturn Awards
Saturn Award for Best Director, Ron Howard- WON
Saturn Award for Best Science Fiction Film- Nominated
Saturn Award for Best Actor, Hume Cronyn- Nominated
Saturn Award for Best Actress, Jessica Tandy- Nominated
Saturn Award for Best Supporting Actress, Gwen Verdon- Nominated
Saturn Award for Best Writing, Tom Benedek - Nominated
Saturn Award for Best Music, James Horner- Nominated
American Film InstituteLists
AFI's 100 Years...100 Cheers- Nominated[16]
AFI's 10 Top 10- Nominated Science Fiction Film[17]
References[edit]
1.Jump up ^"Perry Moore, 'Narnia' series executive producer, dies at 39; Don Peterman, Oscar-nominated cinematographer, dies at 79; Nancy Carr, network TV publicist, dies at 50". Los Angeles Times. 2011-02-22. Retrieved 2011-02-23.
2.Jump up ^"Cocoon' Is 50th Film For Gentleman Star". The Morning Call. Retrieved 2010-11-07.
3.Jump up ^"Cocoon (1985)". Box Office Mojo. 1985-09-29. Retrieved 2011-10-19.
4.Jump up ^"Hot Howard Actor-turned-director Makes Another Splash With `Cocoon`". Sun Sentinel. Retrieved 2010-11-07.
5.Jump up ^Friendly, David T. (1985-06-12). "Back In Splash Of Things With Cocoon". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2010-11-07.
6.Jump up ^Broeske, Pat H. (1988-11-27). "Cocoon & Its Sequels". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2010-11-07.
7.Jump up ^Jicha, Tom (2012-01-20). "Beverly McDermott, top casting director and Hollywood resident, dies". South Florida Sun-Sentinel. Retrieved 2012-01-22.
8.Jump up ^"Filmtracks". Filmtracks. 1997-09-10. Retrieved 2011-10-19.
9.Jump up ^Cocoonsoundtrack review at Filmtracks.com
10.Jump up ^"Cocoon' A Good-time, Summertime Movie Movie Review". The Morning Call. Retrieved 2010-11-07.
11.Jump up ^Maslin, Janet (1985-06-21). "Screen: 'cocoon' opens". The New York Times. Retrieved 2010-11-07.
12.Jump up ^"Cocoon". Variety. 1984-12-31. Retrieved 2010-11-07.
13.Jump up ^"Cocoon". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2011-11-21.
14.Jump up ^Heise, Kenan (1993-12-08). "Oscar-winning Actor Don Ameche, 85". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 2010-11-07.
15.Jump up ^Flint, Peter B. (1993-12-08). "Don Ameche Is Dead at 85; Oscar Winner for 'Cocoon'". The New York Times. Retrieved 2010-11-07.
16.Jump up ^AFI's 100 Years...100 Cheers Nominees
17.Jump up ^AFI's 10 Top 10 Ballot
External links[edit]
Cocoonat allmovie
Cocoonat the Internet Movie Database
Cocoonat the TCM Movie Database
Cocoonat Rotten Tomatoes


[hide]


e

Films directed by Ron Howard


1970s
Grand Theft Auto(1977)


1980s
Night Shift(1982)·
Splash(1984)·
Cocoon(1985)·
Gung Ho(1986)·
Willow(1988)·
Parenthood(1989)


1990s
Backdraft(1991)·
Far and Away(1992)·
The Paper(1994)·
Apollo 13(1995)·
Ransom(1996)·
EDtv(1999)


2000s
How the Grinch Stole Christmas(2000)·
A Beautiful Mind(2001)·
The Missing(2003)·
Cinderella Man(2005)·
The Da Vinci Code(2006)·
Frost/Nixon(2008)·
Angels & Demons(2009)


2010s
The Dilemma(2011)·
Rush(2013)·
Made in America(2013)·
In the Heart of the Sea(2015)





Categories: 1985 films
English-language films
American films
20th Century Fox films
1980s science fiction films
American science fiction films
Ancient astronauts in fiction
Films set in Atlantis
Films about health care
Films directed by Ron Howard
Films featuring a Best Supporting Actor Academy Award winning performance
Films shot in Florida
Films shot in the Bahamas
Films that won the Best Visual Effects Academy Award
Film scores by James Horner







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