Children on Their Birthdays | |
Director: | Mark Medoff |
Screenplay: | Douglas Sloan |
Cinematography: | Steven Shaw |
Editing: | Sidney Levin |
Production Companies: | Frantic Redhead Productions Crusader Entertainment Salem Productions |
Distributor: | Artisan Entertainment Koch Media Moonstone Entertainment |
Runtime: | 102 minutes |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Gross: | $54,912[1] |
Children on Their Birthdays is a 2002 American independent comedy drama film directed by Mark Medoff, and starring Sheryl Lee, Jesse Plemons, Joe Pichler, Tania Raymonde, Christopher McDonald, and Tom Arnold. The screenplay is adapted by Douglas Sloan from Truman Capotes short story of the same title. This was the last film appearance by Pichler before his disappearance in 2006.
The film premiered at WorldFest Houston on March 23, 2002 and was given a limited theatrical release on October 18, 2002.
In the summer of 1947, thirteen-year-old Lily Jane Bobbit has moved with her mute mother to small-town Medda, Alabama, next door to Billy Bob Murphy. Billy Bob develops a crush on Lily Jane, who is a self-possessed Southern belle. Preacher, Billy Bob's rowdy best friend, also takes a liking to Lily Jane, complicating the two boys' friendship. Meanwhile, Billy Bob has a hard time accepting the budding romance between Elinore, his war-widowed mother, and local mechanic Speedy Thorne, whom he and Preacher do odd jobs for.
The town is shaken up by the arrival of Lionel Quince, a con man. When the Quinces announce they are staging a talent contest, Lily Jane, who dreams of being an actress, enters the competition. When the grifters make off with the entry fees, it is up to Billy Bob and Preacher to catch up to the crooks.
The film was shot in Aurora, Lemont and Chicago, Illinois.[2]
Joe Leydon of Variety gave the film a positive review, calling it an "unassuming, charming period piece".[3] He added, "Medoff gets fine work from his actors — note Tom Arnold's amusing oiliness as a grandiloquent con man — and transcends obvious budgetary restraints to enhance pic with evocative period flavor and detail." Conversely, TV Guide said, "Because director Mark Medoff and screenwriter Douglas Sloan never quite get under the skin of Capote's quirky characters, especially the precocious Lily Jane, what should be a magically nostalgic tale seen through the eyes of a star-struck, small-town boy instead feels arch and brittle."[4]
At WorldFest Houston, Children on Their Birthdays won the Platinum Award for Independent Theatrical Feature Films - Family/Children.[5]