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New Year's Day

United States

1990

88 Min
Color
1.85:1
English
  • Currently 4.0/5 Stars.
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DIR Henry Jaglom

PROD Judith Wolinsky

SCR Henry Jaglom

DP Joey Forsyte

CAST Maggie Wheeler, Gwen Welles, Melanie Winter, Henry Jaglom, David Duchovny, Miloš Forman, Michael Emil

ED Henry Jaglom

SOUND Judy Karp

Venice (Competition), Toronto, AFI FEST

Synopsis

Drew is a recently divorced middle-aged Hollywood writer/director who arrives back in New York looking for a path to start his life over and upon arriving at his old apartment, finds three young women residing there until the end of the day. They are the free-spirited Lucy a multi-career woman and part-time actress who wants to move to Hollywood to start her life over; Annie is a photographer Lucy’s best friend who wants to move to L.A. with Lucy, but unsure at what she wants to do with her life; Winona is a 30-year-old magazine editor who feels her biological clock ticking and wants to start a family. On his long day, an assortment of people soon arrive at the apartment for a party where they talk amongst each other about their stance in life in which Drew sees the inspiration from the conversations on deciding to start his life over. –IMDb

Director

Original

Henry Jaglom

Love him or hate him, there is no denying that Henry Jaglom is an auteur, one that has always made a profit on his quirky, low-budget, stream-of-consciousness pictures, often about loneliness and relationships. A scion of a wealthy Russian Jewish financier, he began his career in New York theater before moving to Los Angeles where he continued his affiliation with the Actors Studio and was signed as a contract player with Columbia-Screen Gems, working on series like Gidget and The Flying Nun (both starring Sally Field). His first foray behind the camera came during the Six Day War (Egypt vs. Israel) in 1967 when he shot a three-hour, 8mm, silent movie on the frontlines. The social gadfly in him had already cultivated friendships with such Hollywood personages as Jack Nicholson, Warren Beatty, Sally Kellerman, the screenwriter Carol Eastman and producer Bert Schneider of BBS Productions who saw his movie and hired him to help edit Dennis Hopper’s Easy Rider read more

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KooterBrown

26Dec11

Though maybe not the most compelling story ever written, there are many moments in this movie that not only feel true to life, but somehow closely reflect my own experiences from new year's days past.

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