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Unlikely sidekick flick "Sideways" garners five Oscar nominations

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  • Unlikely sidekick flick "Sideways" garners five Oscar nominations

    The Courier, TX
    Feb 4 2005

    Unlikely sidekick flick "Sideways" garners five Oscar nominations

    By: Michael Huckaby, Movie reviewer 02/04/2005

    "Sideways" is a heartfelt adult comedy about the complexities of
    romantic commitment, long-term male friendship and coping with the
    disappointments of lost youth.

    This charming, sometimes hilarious character study was nominated for
    five prestigious Oscars, including Best Picture, Adapted Screenplay
    and Director. With a subtle though strong and hopeful ending, this
    beautifully-paced film is engaging and provides moving cultural
    commentary.
    The day-by-day story unfolds when two 40-something best friends begin
    a road trip to the beautiful wine-growing Santa Ynez Valley of
    California, a weeklong tour of vineyards, restaurants and golf
    courses, a coastal vacation the best man arranges in lieu of a
    mundane bachelor party. Former college roommates, the pair are
    diametrically opposite in appearance, character and personal ethics.
    Yet this unlikely friendship between an introvert and extrovert is
    rock solid and endures incredible challenges.
    A connoisseur of wines, sad-sack Miles Raymond (Paul Giamatti) is a
    paunchy San Diego eighth-grade English teacher and struggling
    novelist, woebegone over his divorce of two years from Victoria
    (Jessica Hecht). Celibate since the breakup, Miles confessed to being
    unfaithful, an inebriated one-night transgression he felt
    morally-compelled to divulge.
    Nominated for Supporting Actor, Thomas Hayden Church plays "Handsome"
    Jack, a has-been Los Angeles soap opera star and ladies man who
    enthusiastically beds all comers. Genuinely fond of pretty fiancée
    Christine Erganian (Alysia Reiner), the daughter of a wealthy
    Armenian real estate developer, the marriage promises financial
    stability. The future father-in-law has offered Jack a cushy job and
    thoughtfully bought him an expensive set of golf clubs for the
    journey.
    A stop in Santa Barbara, purportedly to wish Miles' doting mother
    (Marylouise Burke) a happy birthday, reveals the mom's understanding
    of her son's fragile sensibilities. Instead of just handing Miles the
    cash he needs, she keeps it in a special hiding place so he can help
    himself without the embarrassment of having to ask.
    After having devastating Miles with the offhand news that Victoria
    remarried a few weeks back, Jack makes a promise he intends to keep.
    "My best man gift to you will be to get you laid," he casually
    informs a sullen Miles as the odd couple approaches their hotel. That
    evening Jack is quick to note the shy glances Miles exchanges with a
    curly-haired blonde waitress at Miles' favorite valley restaurant.
    Earning a Supporting Actress nomination, Virginia Madsen's portrayal
    of Maya is a comforting study of a woman who can come to love a man
    for his inner qualities and vulnerabilities rather than his
    appearance or accomplishments. A wine aficionado soon to earn a
    graduate degree in horticulture, the wholesome Maya was once married
    to a boorish philosophy professor.
    The following afternoon the buddies meet the motorcycle-riding
    Stephanie (Sandra Oh), a wine pourer who believes Jack's blarney.
    When Jack finds out the women know each other, he arranges a double
    date, swearing Miles to secrecy about his coming marriage. A
    slapstick sequence that finally reveals Jack's underlying character
    involves the misadventures that follow after he goes home with Cammie
    (Miss Doty), a chubby waitress married to a truck driver (M.C.
    Gainey).
    Director Alexander Payne, the real-life husband of Sandra Oh, also
    wrote the nominated screenplay.
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