Days_and_Nights

<i>Days and Nights</i>

Days and Nights

2013 American film


Days and Nights is a 2013 American drama film directed and written by Christian Camargo. The film is inspired by The Seagull by Anton Chekhov and set in rural New England in the 1980s.

Quick Facts Days and Nights, Directed by ...

Cast

Reception

As of June 2020, Days and Nights 0% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes, based on 13 reviews with an average rating of 4.11/10.[1]

Ken Rudolph recognized that the actors were splendid, but the film seemed trite, and pretentious.[2] The film critic Thorsten Krüger considers that Camargo "has nothing to tell and nothing to say." [3] The film "intends to be profound, but offers too little to be interesting".

"The cast, so packed with talent that Jean Reno and Cherry Jones barely register, is stuck with stagey dialogue. Juliet Rylance, in the Nina part, has a particularly hard time."[4]

The World Cinema Now Program reviewed the film as: "Anton Chekhov’s The Seagull has seen numerous iterations over the decades, but actor/director Christian Camargo (The Hurt Locker) is able to honor the darkness and depth of this Russian tragedy while relocating it to a Memorial Day weekend in rural New England and putting his own contemporary spin on the material. With a haunting score, lovely cinematography, and strong performances from a remarkable ensemble cast, we see a family come together then fracture apart over the course of one disastrous weekend."[5]

The New York Times commented that "'The Seagull,' with its depiction of fin de siècle ennui, has been hollowed out and trivialized. So little time is given to the subsidiary characters in 'Days and Nights' that, at times, the movie barely makes sense. The avian symbol has been changed from a sea gull to a bald eagle. What remains is a cracked shell."[6]

Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 36 out of 100, based on 6 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable" reviews.[7]


References

  1. "Days and Nights (2014)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved June 26, 2020.
  2. Krüger, Thorsten (7 July 2014). "Days and Nights". Archived from the original on 17 February 2017. Retrieved 27 September 2014.
  3. Archived 2014-01-02 at the Wayback Machine Palm Springs International Film Festival
  4. "A Chekhovian Bird of a Different Feather". The New York Times. 26 September 2014.
  5. "Days and Nights". Metacritic. Fandom, Inc. Retrieved April 10, 2023.

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