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Synopsis

Suburban Connecticut, 1973. While the Watergate hearings blast from the TV, the wayward Hood and Carver families try to navigate a Thanksgiving break simmering with unspoken resentments, sexual experimentation, and cultural confusion. With crystalline clarity, characteristic subtlety, and even a dose of wicked humor, Academy Award–winning director Ang Lee adapts Rick Moody’s acclaimed novel of American malaise into a trenchant, tragic portrait of lost souls. Featuring a tremendous cast of established actors (Kevin Kline, Joan Allen, Sigourney Weaver) and up-and-coming stars (Tobey Maguire, Christina Ricci, Elijah Wood, Katie Holmes), The Ice Storm is one of the finest films of the nineties.—The Criterion Collection

Director

Ang_lee

Ang Lee

Born in 1954 in Taipei, he graduated from the National Taiwan College of Arts in 1975 and then went to the United States, where he studied theater directing at the University of Illinois and film production at New York University. After winning awards in 1985 for his student work (while at N.Y.U., he also worked on Spike Lee’s acclaimed student film, Joe’s Bed-Stuy Barbershop: We Cut Heads), Lee spent the next six years working on screenplays, eventually making his directorial debut in 1992 with Pushing Hands. A comedy about the generational and cultural gaps in a Taiwanese family in New York, it won awards in Lee’s native country. His next film, The Wedding Banquet (1993), further explored cultural and generational differences through a gay New Yorker who stages a marriage of convenience to please his visiting Taiwanese parents. The film met with widespread acclaim, winning a Golden Bear at the Berlin Film Festival and a Best Director prize at the Seattle Film Festival, as well as… read more

Wall

Displaying 4 of 7 wall posts.
Picture of Vincent Bergeron

Vincent Bergeron

29Jan10

Another nice movie, that lacks something of a darker element (that the song by David Bowie suggests). It goes on surface then try to go deeper, but it is too late...   
Picture of Andreas

Andreas

17Jan10

Very underrated film. The frozen nature is a powerful image.  
Picture of Roger Hayn

Roger Hayn

16Oct09

The last 45 minutes is intense.  
Picture of Dolores

Dolores

5Sep09

Deft story- and image-telling, crisp era details, bittersweet fall mood, the kids. Always interesting to rewatch.  

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Reviews

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Untitled

By Marq on October 15, 2009

Re-watched this recently, as it seemed to be the only (vaguely) Thanksgiving-set film that I own (being that it was Canadian Thanksgiving and all). What a masterful film. By far the best thing Ang…  read review

Untitled

By Lena on May 3, 2008

This is ‘The Big Chill’ for the 90’s (the 90’s viewing generation that is, it is set in the 1973).

It’s darker.

Affluence, boredom, adultery – suburban bliss is all veneer.

But…  read review

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DVD

Buy the DVD from The Criterion Collection.