Sweet November (2001 film)

Sweet November

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Pat O'Connor
Produced by Elliott Kastner
Steven Reuther
Deborah Aal
Erwin Stoff
Written by Paul Yurick
Kurt Voelker
Based on Sweet November by
Herman Raucher
Starring Keanu Reeves
Charlize Theron
Music by Christopher Young
Cinematography Edward Lachman
Edited by Anne V. Coates
Production
company
Bel Air Entertainment
Distributed by Warner Bros.
Release dates
  • February 16, 2001 (2001-02-16)
Running time
120 minutes[1]
Country United States
Language English
Budget $40 million
Box office $65,754,228

Sweet November is a 2001 romantic drama film starring Keanu Reeves and Charlize Theron, reuniting the actors after their previous appearance as husband and wife in The Devil's Advocate. The film is based on an film classic made in 1968 and written by Herman Raucher, and starring Anthony Newley and Sandy Dennis .

Plot

Nelson Moss meets Sara Deever, a woman very different from anyone he has met before. His ignorance leads to her failing her driving test. She beguiles him and continually asks him to spend a month with her on the promise that she will change his life for the better. On the first night of November, after Nelson is fired and dumped on the same day, she sleeps with him, and the next day Chaz, a close friend of Sara's, arrives and identifies Nelson as Sara's "November".

Throughout November, the two experience happy times together and fall in love. Nelson examines his life and past, and befriends a fatherless child named Abner. Eventually, he realizes he is in love with Sara and asks her to marry him. It is revealed that Sara has terminal cancer, Non-Hodgkin lymphoma. Because she cannot bear to have Nelson experience her death, she asks him to leave. Sara tells Chaz that Nelson proposed to her. Chaz says that it wasn't the first time that a man had proposed, implying Sara has had numerous "months". Sara confirms this but claims it was the first time she had wanted to say yes. She decides she will not continue the relationship to protect Nelson from being hurt. Nelson complies, but then stages a surprise return during the Thanksgiving holiday, giving her gifts that remind her of their happy times.

They stay together for one more day; he posts November calendars all over her apartment walls, saying it can always be November for them. They make love, but the next morning, Nelson finds Sara is dressed. She asks him to leave, with all his calendars taken down. Nelson becomes confused and heartbroken. Sara asks Nelson to let her go so that he will always have happy memories of her and explains that this is how she needs to be remembered. She will return home to her family (whom she had been avoiding) and face her last days. The movie ends with Sara blindfolding Nelson, giving him one last kiss, and then walking away. Nelson then takes off the blindfold in tears, and is later shown at a park they went to on one of their dates.

Cast

Music

No. TitleLyricsSinger(s) Length
1. "Cellophane"  Amanda Ghost, Sacha Skarbek, Ian Dench, Lucas BurtonAmanda Ghost 3:33
2. "Only Time (Original Version)"  Enya, Roma RyanEnya 3:38
3. "Shame"  Brian TranseauBT 3:21
4. "Touched by an Angel"  Stevie NicksStevie Nicks 4:23
5. "The Consequences of Falling (Lenny B Remix)"  Billy Steinberg, Rick Nowels, Marie-Claire D'Ubaldok.d. lang 4:16
6. "Heart Door (With Dolly Parton)"  Paula ColePaula Cole with Dolly Parton 4:08
7. "My Number"  Tegan Rain Quin, Sara Keirsten QuinTegan and Sara 4:09
8. "Off The Hook"  Steven Page, Ed RobertsonBarenaked Ladies 4:34
9. "Rock DJ"  Robbie Williams, Guy Chambers, Kelvin Andrews, Nelson Pigford, Ekundayo ParisRobbie Williams 4:16
10. "Baby Work Out"  Jackie WilsonJackie Wilson, Alonzo Tucker 3:00
11. "You Deserve To Be Loved"  Dillon O'BrianTracy Dawn 5:02
12. "Wherever You Are"  Larry Klein, Tonio KCeleste Prince 4:17
13. "The Other Half Of Me"  S. Freeman, J. LawrenceBobby Darin 2:27
14. "Calafia"  Dave RalickeJump With Joey  
15. "Middle of the Night"  Paul Brown, Roberto Vally, Rick BraunRick Braun  
16. "Time After Time"  Jules Styne, Sammy CahnKeanu Reeves  

Reception

Sweet November received negative reviews from critics, as the movie holds a 16% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 96 reviews with the consensus: "Bad acting and direction plague this version of Sweet November. The story is unrealistic, as is the chemistry between Theron and Reeves."

Due to the poor response the film had from critics, it was nominated for three Golden Raspberry Awards including Worst Remake or Sequel (where it lost to Planet of the Apes), Worst Actor for Keanu Reeves (lost to Tom Green for Freddy Got Fingered) and Worst Actress for Charlize Theron (lost to Mariah Carey for Glitter). It is listed on Golden Raspberry Award founder John Wilson's book The Official Razzie Movie Guide as one of the 100 Most Enjoyably Bad Movies Ever Made.[2]

Box office

The film opened at #4 at the North American Box office making $11,015,226 USD in its opening weekend, behind Recess: School's Out, Down To Earth and Hannibal. It would ultimately gross only $25.2 million domestically with an additional $40.4 million overseas to a total of $65.7 million worldwide.[3]

See also

References

  1. "SWEET NOVEMBER (15)". British Board of Film Classification. 2001-03-06. Retrieved 2013-03-03.
  2. Wilson, John (2005). The Official Razzie Movie Guide: Enjoying the Best of Hollywood's Worst. Grand Central Publishing. ISBN 0-446-69334-0.
  3. Sweet November at Box Office Mojo

External links

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