Me and You and Everyone We Know | |
Director: | Miranda July |
Producer: | Gina Kwon |
Starring: | Miranda July John Hawkes JoNell Kennedy Brandon Ratcliff Natasha Slayton Miles Thompson Najarra Townsend Carlie Westerman |
Music: | Michael Andrews |
Cinematography: | Chuy Chavez |
Editing: | Andrew Dickler Charles Ireland |
Studio: | FilmFour |
Distributor: | IFC Films |
Runtime: | 91 minutes |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Budget: | $800,000 |
Gross: | $8 million[1] |
Me and You and Everyone We Know is a 2005 American romantic comedy-drama film written and directed by Miranda July.[2] She also acts in the starring role, opposite John Hawkes. The film was the first major studio production for July, who had been known previously for her self-produced short films and performance art.
The structure of the film consists of several subplots which all revolve around an intertwined cast of characters.
The film begins by introducing Richard (John Hawkes), a shoe salesman and recently separated father of two. After being thrown out by his wife Pam (JoNell Kennedy), he gets an apartment of his own to share with his children, Peter (Miles Thompson) and Robby (Brandon Ratcliff). He meets Christine (Miranda July), a senior-cab driver and amateur video artist, while she takes her client to shop for shoes, and the two develop a fledgling romantic relationship.
Robby, six years old, and his 14-year-old brother, Peter, have a joint online chat, which he later depicts in another chat session as "))<>((", an emoticon that means "pooping back and forth, forever." This piques the interest of the woman at the other end and she suggests a face-to-face meeting. When Robby and the woman meet at a park, she realizes he's a child and kisses him and walks away.
Two of Richard's teenaged neighbors, Heather (Natasha Slayton) and Rebecca (Najarra Townsend), develop a playful relationship with a much older neighbor Andrew (Brad William Henke) who works in the shoe store with Richard. He does not say much, but he keeps leaving signs on his window about what he would do to each of them. As a result of this relationship, Heather and Rebecca ask Peter if they can practice oral sex on him, so that he can tell them which of the two does it better; so they do. He says both were exactly the same. The daughter of a neighbor peeks in the window, sees what is happening, and quickly leaves. Heather and Rebecca later come to the neighbor's house intending to have sex with him as practice, but he appears afraid when he sees them through his window and he pretends not to be home.
Meanwhile, Christine's work is rejected by a contemporary art museum, but then later accepted by the curator, who turns out to be the woman who was instant messaging with the brothers.
The plots come together in the end, with Peter developing a friendship with the daughter of a neighbor, having been introduced to the hope chest that she has, Christine and Richard displaying a show of mutual acceptance of their attraction to each other, and, as a final plot device, Robby finding that the noise he had awoken to early every morning was that of an early-rising businessman tapping a quarter on a street sign pole. When asked why he is doing it, he stops and turns around, saying "just passing the time", and gives Robby the quarter. When his bus drives away and Robby tries it out himself, the sun heightens with each tap, time literally passing as he does it.
The film was shot using a Sony HDW-F900 CineAlta high definition digital video camera.[3]
The score, composed by Michael Andrews, was performed largely on a modified Casio SK-1 sampling keyboard.[4]
On-line chat scenes were filmed with open-source Gaim software, now known as Pidgin.
The film received largely positive reviews; it currently holds an 82% rating on Rotten Tomatoes, with the consensus stating "Miranda July's debut feature is a charmingly offbeat and observant film about people looking for love." On Metacritic, Me and You holds a 76, indicating "Generally favorable reviews".
The film won the Caméra d'Or at the 2005 Cannes Film Festival.[5]
Roger Ebert cited it as the fifth best film of the decade.[6]
The soundtrack was released on July 12, 2005 with the following tracks.[7]