Adopt a Sailor (2008) Poster

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8/10
One that got away
zeromostel_222018 July 2013
Warning: Spoilers
This was definitely a low budget film which should not take away from its total impact. I thought the music was a bit slight and schmaltzy and the lighting made everything look rather flat and there was not much use of the camera to make dramatic moments become more exciting. It is rather static in its look. I did think often how much this reminded me of "Who's Afraid of Virginia Wolf", and I did long for some action with movement and better editing. But it was a serviceable filming of a story that kept your attention and made you wonder what was going to happen next. So with all that said, I thought this was an excellent film with great performances. Each actor met the demands of their characters head on. The most difficult to pull off was Peter Coyotes role as the weak, neurotic husband who comes to terms with his failures. He was unlikable from the beginning, so he had to win us over from the get go. The sailer was fantastic. I loved the fact that he stayed the same all the way through, never wavering from his "gee gosh" persona. He needed to in order from the couple to see themselves as they truly are, compared to his honest character. I was dreading that he would suddenly reveal some horrible trait that made him just like them. It would of been cliché to follow the theme of "we're all a mess in this age of technology and impersonal relationships." It was odd that he had the flaw of being so shy that he couldn't even talk to the woman he wants to marry, but that could of been added to show that he is indeed not perfect as the husband accused him of being. The wife was excellent too and showed a mother instinct that you would not think she would initially have. Although it seemed plausible that she would forget about signing up for Adopt A Sailor, one would think she would of gotten a reminder call from the organization to make sure everyone was still on track. This must of been a tough film to promote as it was not edgy and full of fury and profanity, like a Mamet play, nor was it subject matter that a family would be interested in seeing. A very good art film that held your interest and made you think. How refreshing!
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6/10
Quite obviously a play
debdshaw6014 May 2019
Warning: Spoilers
I think this would be far better suited as originally intended for the stage. I love Bebe Newarth but she's acting to the back of the room and on film that's problematic. I also felt the other performances were stilted and Peck was particularly wooden. It made the other two chewing the scenery stand out MUCH more than you want in a film.

I'm not familiar with the original setting of the play but feel like this would be far better suited to the WW2 era than 2008. I'm not a fan of fraught stories with unlikeable characters that have no real growth. I'm not sure it's intended to come off the way it does. It feels in tone like Who's Afraid of Virginia Wolfe where bystanders are forced to watch a disasterous marriage fall apart in the most uncomfortable way possible. Yet the young man sits blandly by with almost no reaction to the chaos around him. He doesn't seem polite and naive but judging.

It might have benefitted from different actors and a film director rather than a theatrical director.
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10/10
Intersections
gradyharp30 December 2010
Charles Evered first wrote the play on which this film is based and then turned that play into a movie, directing it with all the sensitive promise of the script. It is a pleasure to experience this little low budget Indie and be swept up in the honest manner in which it invites us to look at our lives from a different perspective.

It is Fleet Week in New York, a time when sailors about to be shipped out to duty are given an evening of freedom with the option of accepting the invitation of families to invite them into their homes as a farewell. A young HM3 (navy corpsman) from Turkey Scratch, Arkansas played with poetic sensitivity by Ethan Peck (grandson of Gregory Peck) is serendipitously 'adopted' by a dysfunctional New York couple - Patricia (Bebe Neuwirth) runs a gallery and husband Richard (Peter Coyote) makes films. As Patricia responds to the sailor's wonder, 'Movies are what people what to go see, films are what you try to convince people to see' - evidence that Patricia has been supporting the marriage so that Richard doesn't have to work except to make unwanted films: the couple is nearing dissolution. Through one evening of conversation Patricia and Richard voice their failing love, the sailor maintains an innocence about life in the big city and in doing so shares some of his own small town fears and frustrations about becoming an adult- and the three people find a new look on their lives as a result. The film is at once hilarious, verbally brutal, revealing, and genuinely tender as these three people's lives intersect to find new and healthy direction.

Ethan Peck is absolutely extraordinary in maintaining his innocent near-angel role, never becoming mawkish or a parody of 'Southern uneducated kids'. He is a joy throughout the film and demonstrates that he is an actor of great promise. Bebe Neuwirth and Peter Coyote are both solid and polished actors and make us examine their decadent marriage without allowing the viewer to take sides but instead to ache for both of them. The film is a jewel and speaks especially loudly about the young lads who are being sent off to war. Charles Evered is a major talent to watch. Highly Recommended.

Grady Harp
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10/10
Great Movie
tenexe6 May 2010
Warning: Spoilers
What a great movie. The 3 main characters were well written and so diverse. The writing was excellent. Extremely funny at times and heartwarming as well. It was interesting to watch people from two parallel worlds exchanging ideas and beliefs in a civil manner. It really shows that our humanity binds us more together than our differences pull us apart.

Of course we would expect excellence from Peter Coyote and Bebe Neuwirth and they certainly deliver here, but Ethan Peck is excellent as well and definitely holds his own with the other gifted actors. He should have quite a career ahead of him.

The direction was excellent the soundtrack was nice. There was really nothing not to like about this movie. I could definitely see it again.
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9/10
One of those great little films you might have overlooked......
ksdilauri14 November 2018
.......and if you did, remedy that. The acting alone is worth investing the time. Bebe Neuwirth is an intelligent, truly unique actress---a fact supported by her many awards---and her work here is a joy to behold. She balances tender concern for the young serviceman, at the same time dealing with a complicated relationship with her offbeat husband (Peter Coyote). Coyote's character, frankly, is kind of a nut---but the actor's performance allows us to be sympathetic to him. The role of the sailor could very easily have been miscast or written one-dimensionally, but he's believable and the casting of Ethan Peck is perfect----he carries it off splendidly. This is worth a watch.
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trite, sticky-sweet, pretentious, phony nonsense
jm1070129 December 2012
Fairly good performances by the three stars are sabotaged by a plodding and pretentious screenplay. Reviewers on other sites who see parallels with Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? aren't entirely wrong, but they miss the fact that Edward Albee is a genius and Charles Evered is not. This is a dumbed-down, lightened-up, sped-up, Lifetime-movie version of Woolf, filled with clichés and dialog so trite that it makes even talented actors (which these three are) seem like hams.

Patricia (Neuwirth) comes closest to being a believable character; unlike the two men, she has more than one side: a sarcastic harridan who despises her ineffectual husband (like Martha in Woolf) and a sympathetic, even motherly woman who is aware of her own failings. Unfortunately, Neuwirth isn't well cast for either of those roles: she does sarcastic cold-hearted b!tch better than just about anybody, but when it comes to snarling and spitting like an enraged tigress (Liz Taylor's Martha), it's just acting with Neuwirth, and not very good acting.

Richard (Coyote) and Sailor (Peck) are so shallow and one-dimensional that it's surprising when they turn and you see they're not cardboard cutouts. Coyote's whining, thumb-sucking, new-age twit in this stupid movie is almost unbearable. Peck is a too-good-to-be-true angel unawares, a heavenly creature who drifts down off a cloud in his blinding-white sailor duds and his aw-shucks-y'all sincerity and sets Pat and Rich's world a-spinning. He's so perfect I kept wishing somebody would knock his teeth out, or that he'd turn out to have flaws like human beings have, but he never did.

Another reviewer said, "Adopt a Sailor seems sugary and contrived initially." I say it never becomes anything else, and by the end the sugar is SO thick there should be an automatic link to Woolf, or at least a clip - Liz with her hands on her hips braying her rage at the moon - to help viewers clear out the sour taste this shallow, saccharine, contrived, phony movie leaves.
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5/10
boring table talk
sandcrab27724 April 2019
I wish i hadn't watched it ... i'm sure i could have found a hundred other bad films instead ... toss this one to the trash please
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9/10
Here's to honesty.
jamalking154 January 2020
A real young man meets the affectations of a New York couple. Ethan Peck is great in his portrayal of the polite small town boy raised to respect others and show propriety. Bebe Neuwirth was surprisingly believable and Peter Coyote was not ashamed to play an embarrassing character. Well done
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3/10
Tried to Watch This On Amazon Prime
untilnow9917 November 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Ghastly. Absolutely one of those "films" where you wait endlessly, agonizingly for something to happen. Something. Anything.

One previous commenter dubbed it "contrived." Best to take it one step further than that and call it what it is: PAINFUL. Painful to watch.

Why the heck waste time watching these two dysfunctional New Yorkers talking talking talking at this poor dumb hick Sailor Boy? After 20 minutes of this tripe, I fast-forwarded to see if there something which could possibly redeem this bunch of baloney.

All I saw was Peter Coyote writhing around on the floor, sucking his thumb. Enough. ENOUGH.

There should be a law against people writing such awful dialogue and then filming it. What were Coyote and Neuwirth thinking when they signed on for this junk? I hope the paychecks made it worth their while.
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10/10
Refreshing, great movie
smittynlinda23 November 2011
I was channel checking and, having served in the U.S. Navy for 20+ years, wanted to see what it was about. Short and to the point: No FILTHY language, which some person or persons, wish I knew who, somewhere decided that having extreme profanity is ADULT language. It was so refreshing, the language, no nudity,no blood spilling, no sex scenes. A movie you would gladly watch with your kids or grandkids. The sequence regarding the fall from 5000 feet is an absolute treasure. The sailors age would have been, probably, in the 21 to 23 age range. Given the fact that he'd obviously been out of Turkey Track for quite some time, probably seen and heard a lot of things he'd never seen or heard of in Turkey Track, somehow managed to maintain a high degree of innocence, discipline and respect.
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10/10
Great Movie
masonidaho201017 July 2023
Warning: Spoilers
As the wife of a retired sailor myself , I just got to say I loved this movie.

I laughed, I cried, I really enjoyed watching this film.

A young sailor is metaphorically adopted by a couple for the evening and its a very unique strange and emotionally moving story of three people .

A sweet country boy who is a navy corpsman played by the amazing Ethen Peck.

Arrives at an apartment in New York City.

He is greeted by a very confused, middle-aged mentally unbalanced man named Richard played by Peter Coyote.

The young sailor informs him that his wife had signed up to adopt him while they are in Port in New York for fleet week.

Shortly soon after the wife Patricia played by Bebe Neuwirth arrives home and explains that she had forgotten about the arrangements.

They invite him into their home, and the rest of the movie basically is a conversation... But a very interesting one at that.

The movie is basically clean.

There is a little foul language in the movie. So the movie should've been rated PG or PG-13.

The married couple do get in a few arguments.

My favorite part of the movie is when the sailor tells a story about himself.
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