Down to the Bone (film)

Last updated
Down to the Bone
Posterbone.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed by Debra Granik
Written by
  • Debra Granik
  • Richard Lieske
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyMichael McDonough
Edited byMalcolm Jamieson
Production
companies
  • Susie Q Productions
  • Down to the Bone Productions
Distributed byHart Sharp Video
Release dates
  • January 15, 2004 (2004-01-15)(Sundance)
  • November 25, 2005 (2005-11-25)(United States)
Running time
110 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$500,000 [1]
Box office$43,674 [2]

Down to the Bone is a 2004 American independent drama film, directed by Debra Granik and written by Granik and Richard Lieske. It stars Vera Farmiga, who received a Best Actress Award from the Los Angeles Film Critics Association for her role as the drug addicted Irene. The film premiered at the Sundance Film Festival on January 15, 2004, where it won the Director's Award (Granik) and the Special Jury Prize for Acting (Farmiga). The film received a limited release in the United States on November 25, 2005.

Contents

Plot

Irene Morrison (Vera Farmiga), a working class mother of two boys, lives in Upstate New York and works as a supermarket cashier. She also harbors a cocaine addiction. Her eldest son, Ben (Jasper Daniels), whose birthday is approaching, asks Irene to buy a snake for him; she suggests Lego instead. On the night of Halloween, Irene takes her kids trick-or-treating and, at one of the houses they visit, she meets Bob (Hugh Dillon), a nurse.

Later that night, her husband Steve (Clint Jordan) arrives home with a toilet, announcing he's going to build them a second bathroom. In bed, Steve tries to initiate sex, but Irene says she doesn't feel very sexy. She changes the subject back to decorating their bathroom. The next day, Irene takes the kids to a reptile store to buy a snake, but finds that they don't have enough money for one. While her boys wait in the car, Irene visits her dealer, asking him for another fix, but he refuses since she hasn't been paying for the last couple of weeks.

At work, Irene contemplates taking money from the cash register. She then goes back to her dealer with Ben's birthday check from her mother-in-law, but the dealer refuses to take it. Afterwards, Irene checks herself into a drug rehabilitation center. At a meeting about cravings, she meets fellow addict Lucy (Caridad de la Luz), and befriends her. While at the facility, Irene again encounters Bob. Before she leaves, Bob visits with a book that helped him during his quitting phase, and offers her his support.

At Irene's first Narcotics Anonymous meeting, a man celebrates one year of abstinence. In the following weeks, Irene finds it difficult to stay clean when her friends use drugs around her recreationally. One day at work, she is called into the manager's office. She admits her past drug use and is subsequently fired. Lucy suggests they start a cleaning business in order to gain money, to which Irene agrees. On the way to her next NA meeting, Irene offers to give Bob a ride. However, in the car, she instigates an affair with him. Bob then takes her to a snake breeder so she can purchase one for Ben. Later on, the two become intimate, but Bob excuses himself to the bathroom. Irene then walks in to find him shooting up. Furious at his hypocrisy, she argues with him but ends up using his drugs.

Irene and Steve attempt to play a sexual game with one another while using coke, but Irene soon stops it. After taking drugs in Bob's car one night, the two are pulled over by the police. They are both arrested and detained when an officer finds a drug burner on the dashboard and a half-ounce of heroin. A lawyer briefs Irene on her best sentencing option: if she pleads guilty, she must commit to 50 individual counselling sessions, 100 group counselling sessions, and 250 NA meetings a year; he informs her that if she screws up, she'll be sentenced to several years incarceration in a state prison. When she arrives home, she admits her affair to Steve, who tells her to move out.

Lucy gives her a place to crash, although she's angry with Irene for flaking out on a job. Irene eventually finds herself a house and gets some custody of her kids. After another of Irene's Narcotics meetings, Bob shows up to apologize for getting her caught up in his mess and subsequently avoiding her calls. Irene forgives him and he begins to stay at her house. Meanwhile, Bob is using, but intends to start going to support meetings again. His dealer tries to persuade him to sell some pills, but he refuses. Irene realizes he's been getting high by combining his prescribed methadone and other drugs, and as a result could endanger her kids; she confronts him and silently asks him to leave.

Cast

Production

The film, which addresses the effects of drug addiction, was directed and co-written by Debra Granik. The film takes place in upstate New York and was filmed in and around Saugerties, New York. Down to the Bone is Granik's first feature film and was filmed on digital video. Granik went on to direct Oscar-nominated film Winter's Bone in 2010.

Reception

Box office

Down to the Bone was given a limited release in the United States on November 25, 2005. The film made a total of $7,352 in its opening weekend from two theaters (in New York City and Los Angeles). It made an additional $22,889 from film screenings, for a total domestic gross of $30,241. [3] With international takings, the film made a total of $43,674 worldwide. [2]

Critical response

The film has received acclaim from film critics. On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, Down to the Bone holds a 94% approval rating, based on 33 reviews, with an average rating of 7.7/10. The site's consensus reads, "A vivid portrayal of the effects of drug abuse that avoids cinematic clichés, Down to the Bone is a winning effort by first-time director Debra Granik and features a breakout performance by Vera Farmiga." [4] On Metacritic, the film scored a rating of 76 out of 100, based on 13 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews". [5]

San Francisco Chronicle critic G. Allen Johnson gave a positive review, writing, "Rarely is a shoestring-budget movie as maturely directed and well-acted as Down to the Bone, an intriguing film about a normal working woman trying to kick a cocaine habit. The film is so pitch perfect and realistic, it seems you are there with these people, watching their lives unfold before you as it happens." [6] Owen Gleiberman of Entertainment Weekly also praised the film, stating, "From movies, you'd never guess the degree to which drug addiction is a small-town pastime. Vera Farmiga, the star of Down to the Bone, has the face of the world's saddest Madonna, and she's flat-out remarkable as Irene, a financially strapped mother of two who works as a cashier at a megamart-style superstore and snorts cocaine to get through the day. Irene's long straight hair has begun to turn stringy, and she rarely wears makeup, but beneath her sallow skin and dead eyes, you can glimpse the carefree, pretty, slightly hip party girl she once must have been." [7]

Accolades

YearAwardCategoryRecipient(s)Result
2004BendFilm FestivalBest Actress Vera Farmiga Won
Marrakech International Film Festival Best ActressWon
Golden Star Debra Granik Nominated
Sundance Film Festival Directing Award – Drama Won
Special Jury Prize for Acting Vera FarmigaWon
Grand Jury Prize Debra GranikNominated
Deauville Film Festival Grand Special PrizeNominated
Florida Film Festival Grand Jury Award – Best Narrative FeatureWon
Gotham Awards Breakthrough Director Nominated
Locarno International Film Festival Golden LeopoldNominated
Vienna International Film Festival FIPRESCI PrizeWon
2005 Film Independent Spirit Awards Best Female Lead Vera FarmigaNominated
John Cassavetes AwardDebra Granik, Richard Lieske, Susan Leber, Anne RoselliniNominated
Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards Best Actress Vera FarmigaWon
2006 National Society of Film Critics Awards Best Actress Nominated

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References

  1. "The Scariest Four-Letter Word in American Storytelling". This Distracted Globe. July 19, 2009.
  2. 1 2 "Down to the Bone (2005) – Financial Information". The Numbers. Retrieved April 23, 2016.
  3. "Down to the Bone (2005)". Box Office Mojo . Retrieved April 23, 2016.
  4. "Down to the Bone (2005)". Rotten Tomatoes . Retrieved April 7, 2013.
  5. "Down to the Bone (2005) reviews". Metacritic . Retrieved April 23, 2016.
  6. "Drug drama steers clear of all-too tempting pitfalls". San Francisco Chronicle . December 16, 2005.
  7. "Down to the Bone Review". Entertainment Weekly . November 30, 2005.