Like Sunday, Like Rain (DVD REVIEW)
Like
Sunday, Like Rain
DVD Review by Kam Williams
Leighton Meester Compelling as Nanny in Character-Driven Drama
Eleanor (Leighton
Meester) gets so fed up with her struggling musician boyfriend’s (Billie Joe
Armstrong) philandering ways, that she tosses his most prized possession, his
guitar, out of a second-floor window to the street below where it’s smashed
into smithereens. He retaliates by getting her fired from her job as a waitress
by making a scene right in the place where she works.
She then impulsively dumps him,
packs all her belongings into a single suitcase, and moves out of their
apartment. Trouble is that with nowhere to go, she suddenly has to figure out
how to survive in Manhattan
with only $160 to her name.
Eleanor is lucky to land a gig as a
nanny through a temp agency which places her in a posh penthouse where she’ll
be paid room and board to care for a precocious 12 year-old with preoccupied
parents who are never around. In the absence of quality time, Reggie (Julian
Shatkin) has developed into a melancholy misanthrope, whose only saving grace
is that he loves to play the cello.
Can
a cash-strapped, 23 year-old au pair from a blue-collar background relate to a
spoil-rotten rich musical prodigy? That’s the dilemma serving as the driving
force behind Like Sunday, Like Rain, an unlikely-buddies drama reminiscent of
Harold and Maude (1971).
Written and directed by Frank Whaley
(New York City Serenade), the character-driven coming-of-age flick is obviously
very dependent on the generation of chemistry between the leads. Fortunately,
co-stars Leighton Meester and Julian Shatkin both prove capable and convincing
in this regard.
Given
his folks’ conspicuous absence, initially-reluctant Reggie is essentially
afforded free rein to roam around New
York on an unlimited budget, and obliging Eleanor
wins his trust by letting him skip day camp and scheduled play dates. He hangs
with her instead, and the two gradually bond while visiting museums, dining in
fancy restaurants, and even renting a hotel room.
A tenderhearted lesson in how
friendship can be forged in spite of a great gulf in age, class and I.Q.
Very Good (3 stars)
Rated
R for profanity
Running
time: 105 minutes
Distributor:
Monterey Media
DVD
Extras: Raindance interview with director Frank Whaley.
To
see a trailer for Like Sunday, Like Rain, visit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B28IHhaQXCE
To
order Like Sunday, Like Rain on DVD, visit:
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