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The Village (2004 film)

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Ferrarama (talk | contribs) at 05:47, 11 June 2012 (→‎Plot: Changed "fake" to "farce," which is what both Elder Walker and Ivy Walker said as I watch the movie right now.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

The Village
Theatrical poster
Directed byM. Night Shyamalan
Written byM. Night Shyamalan
Produced bySam Mercer
Scott Rudin
M. Night Shyamalan
StarringJoaquin Phoenix
Bryce Dallas Howard
Adrien Brody
William Hurt
Sigourney Weaver
CinematographyRoger Deakins
Edited byChristopher Tellefsen
Music byJames Newton Howard featuring Hilary Hahn (violinist)
Production
company
Distributed byTouchstone Pictures
Release date
  • July 30, 2004 (2004-07-30)
Running time
108 minutes
CountryTemplate:Film US
LanguageEnglish
Budget$71.6 million[1]
Box office$256,697,520[2]

The Village is a 2004 American thriller film written, produced, and directed by M. Night Shyamalan about an end-of-the-19th-century village whose inhabitants live in fear of the creatures inhabiting the woods beyond it. The movie was shot in a re-creation of a 19th-century village outside Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, following Shyamalan's penchant for staging his films near his hometown. The movie opened to reviews ranging from overall negative to mixed[3][4] and was not as financially successful as some of Shyamalan's earlier movies, although it did gross over three times its budget. Despite this, the film gave composer James Newton Howard his fourth Academy Award nomination for Best Original Score.

Plot

The occupants of a small village live in fear of nameless creatures in the surrounding woods. They have built a barrier of oil lanterns and watch towers that are constantly manned to keep watch for "Those We Don't Speak Of." It is explained that the villagers have a long-standing truce with the monsters; the villagers do not go into their woods, and the creatures do not enter their village. The villagers execute a well-rehearsed alarm, in which they rush home, lock their doors and hide in their cellars. The dead, skinned bodies of small animals start to appear around the village.

After the funeral of a seven year old boy, Lucius Hunt (Joaquin Phoenix) asks the village elders for permission to pass through the woods to get medical supplies from "the towns". His request is denied and later he is admonished by his mother, Alice (Sigourney Weaver), for wanting to go to the towns, which the villagers describe as "wicked places where wicked people live." The Elders seem to keep dark secrets of their own in black boxes, the contents of which they keep hidden from their own offspring. After Lucius makes a short venture into the woods, the creatures leave warnings around the village in the form of splashes of red paint (referred to by the villagers only as "the bad color") on all the villagers' doors.

Meanwhile, Ivy Elizabeth Walker (Bryce Dallas Howard), the blind daughter of the chief Elder, Edward Walker (William Hurt), informs Lucius that she has strong feelings for him, and he returns her affections. They arrange to be married, but things go horribly wrong when Noah Percy (Adrien Brody), a young man with apparent developmental problems who is wise to the elders' trick, stabs Lucius with a knife that he kept hidden away in his pocket. He does this because he is in love with Ivy himself. Noah is locked in a room until a decision is made about his fate.

Edward goes against the wishes of the other Elders, agreeing to allow Ivy to pass through the forest and seek out medicine for Lucius. Before she leaves, Edward explains the secret of the creatures – they are "farce" - bogeymen created by the Elders to keep the children from entering the woods in an attempt to keep them from leaving the village. Edward does mention, however, that "Those We Don't Speak Of" were based upon legends that he had heard at one time, of "real creatures" living in the woods. Ivy seems only partly convinced by this explanation, inquiring whether the skinned animals were "also farce".

While Ivy is traveling through the forest, one of the beasts suddenly attacks her. She tricks it into falling into a deep hole to its death. The creature is actually Noah in a costume that he had found previously under the floor of the room where he was kept locked away.

Ivy eventually finds her way to the far edge of the woods, where she encounters a high, ivy-covered wall. After she climbs over the wall, a park ranger named Kevin, driving a Land Rover with the words "Walker Wildlife Preserve" on the side spots Ivy and is shocked to hear that she has come out of the woods. He then learns that Ivy's last name is Walker.

During this time, it is revealed to us that the village was founded some time in the late 1970s, when Edward Walker, professor of American History at the University of Pennsylvania, approached other people he met at a grief counseling clinic after his father had been murdered. He asked them if they wished to join him in "an idea" he had. From this apparently grew "the village", a secluded town in the middle of a wildlife preserve purchased with Edward's family fortune; a place where they would be protected from any aspect of the outside world and sustain themselves. The head ranger, Jay (M. Night Shyamalan), explains to Kevin that the Walker estate pays to maintain the ranger corps, the rangers make sure no one goes into the wildlife preserve to "disturb the animals", the Walker estate "paid off" the government to keep the entire wildlife preserve a "no-fly zone".

Kevin secretly retrieves medicine from a ranger station and Ivy returns to the village with the supplies. The Elders open their black boxes, each containing mementos from their lives from the outside world, including items related to their past traumas. All the Elders sit around Lucius' bed. Edward points out that Noah's death will allow them to continue deceiving the rest of the villagers that there are "creatures" in the woods and all the Elders take a vote to continue living in the village. The film ends as Ivy arrives, kneels at Lucius' bedside, and clutching his hand and says, "I'm back, Lucius."

Cast

Production

The film was originally titled The Woods, but the name was changed because a film directed by Lucky McKee, The Woods, already had that title.[5] Like other Shyamalan productions, this film had high levels of secrecy surrounding it, needed to protect the expected twist ending that was a known Shyamalan trademark. Despite that, the script was stolen over a year before the film was released, prompting many "pre-reviews" of the film on several Internet film sites[6][7] and much fan speculation about plot details including the film's leaked final line, a truck driver exclaiming "Crazy fucking white people".[8][9]

The village seen in the film was built in its entirety in one field outside Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania. An adjacent field contained an on-location temporary sound stage.[10] Production on the film started in October 2003, with delays because some scenes needing fall foliage could not be shot because of a late fall season. Principal photography was wrapped up in mid December of that year. In April and May 2004, several of the lead actors were called back to the set. Reports noted that this seemed to have something to do with a change to the film's ending,[11][12] and, in fact, the film's final ending differs from the ending in a stolen version of the script that surfaced a year earlier with the "Crazy fucking white people" scene replaced by an "Ivy meets a friendly ranger" sequence and a new ending scene added after that with all the Elders and Ivy around Lucius' bed.[13]

Reception

The Village received mixed to average reviews from film critics polled, earning a "rotten" at Rotten Tomatoes with only 43% giving it a positive appraisal, based on 197 reviews,[4] and a score of 44 out of 100 ("mixed or average") in Metacritic's weighted average scoring system, based on 40 reviews.[3]

Roger Ebert gave the film one star and wrote: "The Village is a colossal miscalculation, a movie based on a premise that cannot support it, a premise so transparent it would be laughable were the movie not so deadly solemn ... To call the ending an anticlimax would be an insult not only to climaxes but to prefixes. It's a crummy secret, about one step up the ladder of narrative originality from It was all a dream. It's so witless, in fact, that when we do discover the secret, we want to rewind the film so we don't know the secret anymore." There were also comments that the film, while raising questions about conformity in a time of "evil," did little to "confront" those themes.[14] Slate's Michael Agger commented that Shyamalan was continuing in a pattern of making "sealed-off movies that [fall] apart when exposed to outside logic."[15]

The movie did have a number of admirers. Critic Jeffrey Westhoff commented that though the film had its shortcomings, these did not necessarily render it a bad movie, and that "Shyamalan's orchestration of mood and terror is as adroit as ever".[16] Philip Horne of The Daily Telegraph in a later review noted "this exquisitely crafted allegory of American soul-searching seems to have been widely misunderstood".[17]

The soundtrack by Howard has also been widely praised, and was nominated by the American Film Institute as one of the Best Film Scores.[18]

Plagiarism allegation

Simon & Schuster, publishers of the 1995 young adults' book Running Out of Time by Margaret Peterson Haddix, claimed that the film had stolen ideas from the book.[19] The book had a plot which features a village whose inhabitants are secretly forced to live in the 1830s when the year is actually 1996. The plot of Shyamalan's movie had several similarities to the book. They both involve a village, which is actually a park in the present day (Shyamalan uses a late nineteenth-century village), have young heroines on a search for medical supplies, and both have adult leaders bent on keeping the children in their village from discovering the truth.[20] In Haddix's novel, the truth is that the village is a genetic experiment; in the movie, that the adults had decided to withdraw from the outside world.

Box office

The film grossed $114 million in the U.S., and $142 million in international markets. Its worldwide box office totalled $256 million, the tenth highest grossing PG-13 movie of 2004.[2] The film cost $71.6 million in production fees and $44 million in marketing.[21]

Awards and nominations

2005 ASCAP Film and Television Music Awards
2005 Academy Awards (Oscars)
2005 10th Empire Awards
2005 Evening Standard British Film Awards
2005 MTV Movie Awards
2005 Motion Picture Sound Editors (Golden Reel Award)
  • Nominated - Best Sound Editing in a Feature: Music, Feature Film — Thomas S. Drescher
2004 Online Film Critics Society Awards
  • Nominated - Best Breakthrough Performance — Bryce Dallas Howard
2005 Teen Choice Awards
  • Nominated - Choice Movie Scary Scene — Bryce Dallas Howard, Ivy Walker waits at the door for Lucius Hunt.
  • Nominated - Choice Movie: Thriller

Soundtrack

Untitled

The original film score and songs were composed by James Newton Howard, and feature solo violinist Hilary Hahn. The album was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Score (lost to the score of the film Finding Neverland).

Track listing
  1. "Noah Visits"
  2. "What Are You Asking Me?"
  3. "The Bad Color"
  4. "Those We Don't Speak of"
  5. "Will You Help Me?"
  6. "I Cannot See His Color"
  7. "Rituals"
  8. "The Gravel Road"
  9. "Race To Resting Rock"
  10. "The Forbidden Line"
  11. "The Vote"
  12. "It Is Not Real"
  13. "The Shed Not To Be Used"

References

  1. ^ The Smoking Gun Hollywood by the Numbers
  2. ^ a b "The Village (2004)", Box Office Mojo
  3. ^ a b "Village, The (2004): Reviews". Metacritic. CNET Networks, Inc. Retrieved 2010-05-05.
  4. ^ a b "Village, The (2004) Movie Reviews". Rotten Tomatoes. IGN Entertainment, Inc. Retrieved 2010-05-05.
  5. ^ Lycos review of the Village
  6. ^ Pre-review of The Village
  7. ^ Pre-review of The Village at horrorlair.com
  8. ^ AintItCool.com - Moriarty Rumbles! M. Night's In The WOODS, SECOND HAND LIONS, And LOST IN TRANSLATION
  9. ^ horrorlair.com - The Woods by M. Night Shyamalan, HTML Script
  10. ^ IMdb.com - FAQ for The Village "Where exactly was the movie filmed? Did they use historical buildings or did they build everything?"
  11. ^ Change to ending of The Village
  12. ^ More views of The Village – aerial
  13. ^ The Village Script - Dialogue Transcript
  14. ^ The Reel Deal: The Village
  15. ^ Slate.com: "Village Idiot"
  16. ^ Northwest Herald's The Village review
  17. ^ telegraph.co.uk
  18. ^ HollywoodBowlBallot
  19. ^ Stolen idea in The Village?
  20. ^ Running Out of Time (novel)
  21. ^ the-numbers.com -The Village

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