Little Manhattan

Little Manhattan
Theatrical release poster
Directed by Mark Levin[lower-alpha 1]
Produced by Gavin Polone
Arnon Milchan
Written by Jennifer Flackett[lower-alpha 1]
Starring Josh Hutcherson
Charlie Ray
Bradley Whitford
Cynthia Nixon
Music by Chad Fischer
Cinematography Tim Orr
Edited by Alan Edward Bell
Production
company
Distributed by 20th Century Fox
Release date
  • September 30, 2005 (2005-09-30)
Running time
90 minutes[1]
Country United States
Language English
Box office $1.1 million[1]

Little Manhattan is a 2005 American romantic comedy film directed by Mark Levin and written by Jennifer Flackett, starring Josh Hutcherson and Charlie Ray.[2][lower-alpha 1] It is set in Manhattan, and follows a ten year old boy as he experiences his first love.[3]

Plot

Gabe, an adventerous young boy, lives in Manhattan with his two parents who are on the verge of divorcing. Gabe spends most of his free time exploring the city on his scooter. His daily exploits are followed and encouraged by the friendly concierge at his building. Eventually, Gabe meets an 11-year-old girl in his grade, Rosemary, who he's known since kindergarten. After being partnered with her for sparring in self-defense class, he suddenly notices her as a girl, not another face. To Gabe's elation, they begin spending time together and he is completely enamored with not only her, but her life. He takes her on a tour through Central Park, and another day they venture for fun across the city and use their self-defense skills to fight a bully named Daryl Kitzens and try to inspect an apartment for rent, worrying his nervous parents. He discovers that Rosemary is soon leaving for camp for six weeks and won't be back until summer's end and her parents are planning to enroll her in a private school. She lives with her loving upper-class parents on the edge of Central Park. Rosemary's parents take him and Rosemary to hear a jazz pianist at The Carlyle, where the young twosome finally hold hands. After the show, Rosemary's parents tell them to say goodnight and her parents go to get milk. After the parents leave, Gabe and Rosemary begin talking, and he interrupts her by kissing her.

Rosemary's family's life is in contrast to Gabe's; he lives with his soon-to-be-divorcing parents, who have declared an awkward truce while waiting for their divorce to be finalized. As their relationship progresses, Gabe begins to question what is happening to him and why he is falling in love with Rosemary. When things seem to be going perfectly, Gabe's world is suddenly turned upside down when he and Rosemary are assigned new sparring partners. Gabe is instantly jealous of Rosemary's new partner: a taller blonde boy named Tim Staples, who's much better at self-defense than he is. With their remaining time running out, Gabe tries to move closer to Rosemary, but only drives her away. In a desperate move to win Rosemary back, Gabe attempts to show off for Rosemary to get his yellow belt, but painfully fractures his hand in the process.

Being crushed with what love really is, he learns from his father that the parents' marriage fell apart because of things left unsaid. Realizing he is out of time, Gabe goes to find Rosemary. He interrupts her during the wedding reception she is attending and declares his love. Taken aback, Rosemary replies she doesn't think she is ready for love, but is really happy to see Gabe. She asks for a dance and Gabe agrees. As they dance, Gabe muses that he and Rosemary were on different paths — "like two ships that passed in Sheep Meadow". He returns home to find his parents laughing over their honeymoon recollections. Gabe is pleased and surprised when his father says he "cleared out some old stuff" and his parents appear to have reconciled. They happily go out for dinner, and as the movie ends, Gabe, narrating, summarizes what Rosemary meant to him: "...I'm never gonna get another first love. That one's always gonna be her."

Cast

  • Josh Hutcherson as Gabriel "Gabe" Burton, The main protagonist who's in love with Rosemary Telesco
  • Charlie Ray as Rosemary Telesco, Gabe's love interest
  • Bradley Whitford and Cynthia Nixon as Adam Burton and Leslie Burton, Gabe's parents
  • Willie Garson as Ralph, the elevator man who's nice to Gabe
  • Tonye Patano as Birdie, Rosemary's nanny
  • Josh Pais as Ronny Leslie's new date
  • John Dossett and Talia Balsam as Mickey and Jackie Telesco, Rosemary's parents
  • Jonah Meyerson as Sam
  • Connor Hutcherson (Josh Hutcherson's younger brother) as the boy who throws up
  • Anthony Laflamme as Tim Staples, Rosemary's new karate partner and Gabe's rival
  • Mike Chat as Himself, Gabe's karate hero.
  • Nick Cubbler as Daryl Kitzens, the bully who is beat by Gabe and Rosemary
  • Neil Jay Shastri as David Betanahu, Gabe's new karate partner

Reception

Critical response

Little Manhattan received mostly positive reviews from film critics. It holds a 77% approval rating at Rotten Tomatoes, with 23 positive reviews out of 30.[4] BBC's Stella Papamichael wrote that the film was "sweet but not syrupy and heart-warming without being manipulative, this kid flick stands tall among recent Hollywood love stories".[5] Kevin Thomas, writing for the Los Angeles Times, called the film "a handsome charmer about the avalanche of first love...an endearing, affectionately humorous and even lyrical depiction of the dawning of adolescence amid the privileged". However he called the script "problematic...[Gabe's] speech as soundtrack narrator of his own story is precociously improbable".[6] Jeffrey Lyons of NBC-TV called Little Manhattan "one of the sweetest, most touching films you'll see". Variety's Brian Lowry was less positive about the film. He wrote "Resting almost entirely on the shoulders of its young leads, both they and the pic lack the sparkle to sustain what seeks to be a whimsical premise but, except for a few moments, proves ponderous instead." He also believed the film belonged on "youth-targeting basic-cable networks" instead of having a cinematic release.[7]

Box office

The film made $36,397 in the opening weekend in the United States. By December 18, 2005 the film had grossed $385,373. It had worldwide box office takings of $1,117,920.

Music

The film's score was composed by Chad Fischer, the guitarist and lead singer of Lazlo Bane.

The film also featured 18 other songs, half of which are covers, by a variety of musicians, from the well-known The Beatles and Elvis Presley to little-known The Meadows and Loston Harris. Chad Fischer contributed several songs to the film both as a performer and producer.

The soundtrack album for the film hasn't been released, making half of the songs used exclusive to the film.

Track listing

No.TitleWriter(s)Artist(s)Length
1."Only the Strong Survive[A]"Jerry ButlerElvis Presley2:42
2."Birdland"Ron AsperyRon Aspery 
3."When the Saints Go Marching In[C]"TraditionalThe All Star Marching Band 
4."Kung Fu Fighting (Adrian Sherwood On-U-Remix)[A]"Carl DouglasCarl Douglas4:41
5."Sleepless in Brooklyn"Chad Fischer, Timothy Bright and Chris LinkLazlo Bane 
6."Younger Yesterday[A]"Todd Herfindal and Kevin HoulihanThe Meadows3:15
7."New Fast[A]"Jeff GrammAden2:27
8."Miserable Life"Chad Fischer and Lyle WorkmanChad Fischer and Lyle Workman 
9."Burning Flame[C]"Richard FriedmanRichard Friedman 
10."Teach Me Tonight[C]"Sammy Cahn and Gene de PaulLoston Harris 
11."Map of My Heart[B]"Chad FischerChad Fischer3:24
12."Lonely Road[A]"Erik SchrodyEverlast3:18
13."Polly Wolly Doodle[C]"TraditionalSusannah Blinkoff 
14."The Very Thought of You[A]"Ray NobleNat King Cole3:48
15."Love[A]"Matt White and Paul UmbachMatt White2:50
16."At Last[A]"Mack Gordon and Harry WarrenEtta James3:02
17."Love Grows (Where My Rosemary Goes)[C]"Barry Mason and Tony MacaulayFreedy Johnston 
18."In My Life[C]"John Lennon and Paul McCartneyMatt Scannell 

  • A ^ Available on other releases
  • B ^ Available to listen on Chad Fischer's Myspace page[8]
  • C ^ Available by original and/or other musicians

References

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 Though Levin is solely credited as the director and Flackett as the writer, they assert on the DVD commentary that they shared writing and direction duties.

References

  1. 1 2 Little Manhattan at Box Office Mojo
  2. "Little Manhattan > Production Credits". allmovie. Retrieved July 17, 2009.
  3. "Little Manhattan > Cast". allmovie. Archived from the original on January 16, 2013. Retrieved July 17, 2009.
  4. "Little Mahattan Movie Reviews, Pictures". Rotten Tomatoes. Archived from the original on October 4, 2008. Retrieved June 17, 2009.
  5. Papamichael, Stella (June 5, 2006). "BBC Movies review – Little Manhattan". BBC Entertainment. British Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved July 17, 2009.
  6. Thomas, Kevin (December 2, 2005). "'First Descent', '39 Pounds', 'Little Manhattan'". calendarlive.com. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved July 17, 2009.
  7. Lowry, Brian (September 29, 2005). "Little Manhattan Review". variety.com. Variety. Retrieved July 17, 2009.
  8. Chad Fischer Archived October 16, 2016, at the Wayback Machine., on Myspace
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