James Van Der Beek Movies
Tall, blonde, and possessing a choir of perfect teeth that would make any dentist jealous, James Van Der Beek has emerged as one of the ultimate teen pin-ups of the late 1990s. First attaining prominence with the title role of Dawson Leary in the WB Network's Dawson's Creek, Van Der Beek proceeded to branch out with film and stage work, and in the process managed to be anointed in 1998 as one of People Magazine's "50 Most Beautiful."Born March 8, 1977 to a cell phone salesman father and a mother who ran a gymnastics studio, Van Der Beek was raised in his hometown of Cheshire, Connecticut. The oldest of three children, he was an honors student and excelled at football until an injury sidelined his budding career. In its own way the injury proved to be serendipitous, as it led Van Der Beek to take up acting. Following a casting trip to New York with his mother, Van Der Beek made his professional debut at the age of 16 in the Off-Broadway production of Finding the Sun, which was written and directed by Edward Albee. More stage work ensued, as did some television work (most notably in the form of a 1995 stint on As the World Turns).
Van Der Beek made his film debut in the 1995 comedy Angus, aptly cast as a golden-boy football quarterback. Another movie, the little-seen Claire Danes/Jude Law vehicle I Love You, I Love You Not, followed in 1997, but it was his starring role in Dawson's Creek], premiering in January of 1998, that gave Van Der Beek his big break. The show's success with critics and audiences alike propelled Van Der Beek and his fellow cast members into the limelight, and soon Van Der Beek secured his first major film roles, first in the little-seen Harvest (1998), and then in the football comedy-drama Varsity Blues (1998). The film's modest reviews were overshadowed by its financial success, geared as it was toward a new generation of teenagers eager to see their favorite actors in glorious celluloid. The film's enthusiastic commercial response, coupled with Dawson's continuing success, virtually guaranteed the young actor that no matter what the future held for him, his career had certainly gotten off to a very positive start.
Though to this point Van Der Beek's success had been built on the image of the squeaky clean, all-American small town boy, a pair of efforts following the millennial turnover signaled that the actor who had become the very personification of white-bred wholesomeness was determined to create a new, decidedly more edgy image for himself. Though his initial effort ended in mystery as the segment featuring Van Der Beek as a closeted high school homosexual was cut from director Todd Solandz's Storytelling (2002) shortly before the film's release, his efforts would be cemented later that same year with the subsequent release of The Rules of Attraction. Directed by Pulp Fiction collaborator Roger Avery (Killing Zoe) and based on a novel by American Psycho author Brett Easton Ellis, The Rules of Attraction found the former innocent plunged into a strange world of drugs and sexual deviance that left many Dawson's Creek fans up in arms. As college student/drug dealer Sean Bateman (who also happens to be the brother of American Psycho maniac Patrick Bateman) Van Der Beek essayed what was without question his seediest role to date. With his Dawson's Creek and Rules of Attraction characters existing on the most extreme polar opposite ends of the spectrum imaginable, Van Der Beek made it no secret that his acting coach recieved a hearty workout as the actor attempted to balance hiumself between the two projects. ~ Rebecca Flint Marx, All Movie Guide
His career hinging one all-important screenplay, a desperate scribe with a killer case of writer's block locks himself away for eighteen grueling days in order to meet the deadline that could ultimately make or break him. But this is no ordinary script, because it prominently features a haunting collection of characters from the writer's past - including a clown that would make even Pennywise running for the cover of the sewer. Now cabin fever is fast setting in, leaving the increasingly delirious screenwriter unable to differentiate between the reality that surrounds him, and the fantasy that consumes him. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- James Van Der Beek
Fear rises from the depths when a government scientist travels to a remote fishing village in order to investigate rumors of a massive underwater beast with a frightful taste for human flesh. Panic has spread through the fishing village where locals have lived off of the sea's bounty for centuries, and as word of an aggressive leviathan reaches the powers that be, an investigator is dispatched in order to confirm or refute the frightening rumors. Government scientist Dan Leland (James Van Der Beek) is a man of logic, but he's about to cross paths with a creature that seems born straight out of his worst nightmares. In this instance at least, the rumors are well founded, and by the time Dan comes eye-to-eye with the source of all the panic it already be too late for him. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- James Van Der Beek, Alexandra Castillo, (more)
When a diverse group of lifelong friends comes together to celebrate the marriage of devoted couple Elise (Amy Adams) and Michael (Adam Garcia), the mixed-up relationships of the past pave the road to a weekend no one is likely to soon forget in the feature debut from filmmaker Matthew Cole Weiss. The setting is Los Angeles, CA, and the event is the wedding between a man and a woman who always seemed destined to be together. Unfortunately, all relationships can't be as healthy as Elise and Michael's is, and though best man and maid of honor Rich (Aaron Stanford) and Samantha (Melissa Sagemiller) seem to be preparing to take the plunge, the same certainly cannot be said for neurotic actress Lana (Mena Suvari). A free-spirited soul who has experienced flings with a variety of wedding attendees including the hapless Pockets (Jon Abrahams), alcoholic actor Simon (James Van Der Beek), and manic children's television program host Donovan (Ethan Embry), Lana attempts to sort out her past flings as lovelorn agent Quentin (Colin Hanks) pines for the bride's sister and the estranged father of the groom attempts to reconnect with his long-lost son. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Amy Adams, Adam Garcia, (more)
The sixth and final season of Dawson's Creek begins just as summer of Dawson Leery's 19th year is drawing to a close. Having spent the summer in Hollywood as an assistant film director, Dawson returns to his native Massachusetts, there to work on a location shoot of the horror epic "Wicked Dead" under the tutelage of bombastic moviemaker Todd Carr (Hal Ozsan). This will be quite an experience for Dawson, especially when he hooks up with the film's tempestuous star Natasha Kelly (Bianca Kajlich); and when Todd storms off the set in disgust, Dawson is afforded his first opportunity to be a full-fledged director. Likewise back from L.A. are Dawson's pal Pacey (Joshua Jackson) -- who will soon take a job at brokerage firm run by slickster Rich Rinaldi (Dana Ashbrook) -- and Pacey's latest tootsie Audrey Lidell (Busy Philipps), who happens to be the extremely unstable college roommate of Dawson's off-and-on girlfriend Joey (Katie Holmes). As for Jen (Michelle Williams), the girl to whom Dawson finally "gave it up" during the previous season, she has returned to Boston Bay College, doing her best to deal with the fact that her fun-loving grandmother Evelyn (Mary Beth Piel) has decided to enroll as well. Additionally, the beleaguered Jack McPhee (Kerr Smith), having come to terms with his own homosexuality, has a new boyfriend named David (Greg Rikaart). As the season rolls on, Jen is attracted to college peer counselor CJ (Jensen Ackles), Joey begins going out with a bartender named Eddie Dooling (Oliver Hudson), and Audrey lands a job as a rock singer, breaking up with Pacey and developing a dangerous dependency on booze in the process. Several more plot twists and turns later, the series arrives at its final two-hour episode, set five years in the future. Dawson is now a major TV producer, turning out a semi-autobiographical series called "The Creek" (which, like Dawson's Creek, is seen on Wednesday nights!); Pacey owns a restaurant, and Jack is a teacher, dating Pacey's brother Doug; Audrey has straightened out her personal problems and is touring with a big-name band; Joey has a thriving career as a book editor in Manhattan; and Jen is now a single mom and the manager of an art gallery. A happy ending? Not quite...not with the tragic pall hanging over the familiar characters, due to Jen's very fragile health. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- James Van Der Beek, Katie Holmes, (more)
Season five of Dawson's Creek finds 18-year-old Dawson Leery (James Van Der Beek) fulfilling a lifelong dream by entering the USC film school. Even better, he lands a directorial internship in Hollywood -- but alas, the job lasts only as long as it takes egotistical movie director Todd Carr (Hal Ozsan) to fire Dawson. Meanwhile, Dawson's off-and-on girlfriend Joey (Katie Holmes) is enrolled at Worthington University, pining away for her high-school sweetheart. Joey's uninhibited Beverly Hills-bred roommate, Audrey Lidell (Busy Philipps), advises Joey to forget Dawson and sow a few wild oats -- which she does, with handsome Professor David Wilder (Ken Marino). Back in Massachusetts, Jen Lindley (Michelle Williams) and Jack McPhee (Kerr Smith) are attending Boston Bay College, when Jen enters into an affair with musician Charlie Todd (Chad Michael Murphy). And Dawson's pal Pacey, who has no intention of entering college (as if he would qualify!) is working at a restaurant and squiring a waitress named Karen Torres (Lourdes Benedicto) -- who, in turn, is sleeping with her married boss, Danny (Ian Kahn). Dropping out of USC, a disillusioned Dawson returns to Capeside, just before his dad, Mitch (John Wesley Shipp), is killed in a car accident. Now Dawson has all the more reason to remain home: he is undergoing psychiatric care to deal with his dad's death, and must stick around to comfort his mom, Gail (Mary-Margaret Humes). As the season progresses, Dawson finally loses his virginity -- to Jen. They move in together, but find they have less in common than they thought. Meanwhile, Charlie pressures Joey to accompany him on his band tour, Pacey spends a passionate night with Joey's roomie Audrey, and Jack attempts suicide after flunking out of school and losing his latest boyfriend in one fell swoop. Season five concludes as Joey prepares to take her long-delayed Paris vacation, Pacey goes to work as a security guard, Jack accompanies Jen to Costa Rica, and Dawson revs up for a wild time in L.A....but with whom? ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- James Van Der Beek, Katie Holmes, (more)
Season four of Dawson's Creek finds teenagers Joey Potter (Katie Holmes) and Pacey Witter (Joshua Jackson) still very much in love, albeit racked with guilt because of the pain they've inflicted upon their lifelong friend, budding filmmaker Dawson Leery (James Van Der Beek). The couple's relationship intensifies when circumstances force Pacey to move into Joey's house. Even so, they still haven't had sex: Joey remains a virgin, and Pacey is just plain nervous. As for Dawson, he is startled to learn that his mother, Gail (Mary-Margaret Humes), divorced for over a year from his dad, Mitch (John Wesley Shipp), is pregnant again. Over at the McPhee household, Jack (Kerr Smith) continues to agonize over his homosexuality, while his sister Andie (Meredith Monroe) has attained early acceptance at Harvard University. Alas, Andie places her future in the gravest jeopardy when she overdoses on "ecstasy" at a rave party, a calamity for which Jack holds Andie's friend Jen (Michelle Williams) responsible. Elsewhere, Dawson and Pacey decide to patch up their differences and become friends again after Dawson rescues Pacey and Jen from a storm at sea, but this resolve is nearly dashed to bits when Pacey finds out that his older sister Gretchen (Sasha Alexander) has been smooching with Dawson. Also, Mark Matkevich joins the cast as natural-born troublemaker Drue Valentine, who moves in with Jen and her grandmother Evelyn (Mary Beth Piel). And halfway through the season, Pacey and Joey finally "do it"! The season finale is pepped up with a deus ex machina when Dawson unexpectedly receives a huge financial legacy from the late Arthur Brooks (Harve Presnell), a crotchety old movie director who had served as the subject of one of Dawson's class film projects. The money enables Dawson to enroll at USC, while Joey prepares for her freshman year at Worthington College. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- James Van Der Beek, Katie Holmes, (more)
This 1999 episode of Saturday Night Live is hosted by James Van Der Beek and features musical guest Everlast. ~ Skyler Miller, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- James Van Der Beek, Everlast, (more)
Season three of Dawson's Creek opens shortly after the divorce of Dawson Leery's parents, with 16-year-old aspiring filmmaker Dawson (James Van Der Beek) having spent the summer with his mom in Philadelphia. Back in Capeside, MA, Joey (Katie Holmes) is down on herself big-time for having broken up with Dawson just when he needed her most -- though Dawson himself has been consoling himself with the company of "mystery woman" Eve Whitman (Brittany Daniel), whose quirky antisocial behavior alters many lives when she herself arrives in Capeside. Meanwhile, Dawson's dad, Mitch (John Wesley Shipp), has become the local high-school football coach, with Jack McPhee (Kerr Smith) as the team's top player, a fact that causes a bit consternation for Jack, who still hasn't fully "come out" as a homosexual. Jack's sister Andie (Meredith Monroe) returns to town, recovered from her mental breakdown. With Dawson apparently out of the picture, his pal Pacey (Joshua Jackson) begins dating Joey -- a situation that causes a rift between the two buddies. And Dawson and Joey's onetime mutual "amour" Jen (Michelle Williams) starts going out with Henry Parker (Michael Pitt), but breaks off the relationship after an unpleasant scene at the junior prom. Notable episodes this season include "Escape From Witch Island," a full-blooded lampoon of The Blair Witch Project, and "Stolen Kisses," which introduces Rodney Scott as Will Krudski, who would later be spun off into his own series, Young Americans. Season three ends with Joey trying to choose between Dawson and Pacey -- and, far more memorably, with American network television's first gay teenage kiss, between Jack and his boyfriend, Ethan (Adam Kaufman). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- James Van Der Beek, Katie Holmes, (more)
Aspiring moviemaker Dawson Leery (James Van Der Beek) and his lifelong friends Joey Potter (Katie Holmes) and Pacey Witter (Joshua Jackson) enter their sophomore year of high school as Dawson's Creek enters its inaugural season. Life in Capeside, MA, has been fairly sedate for the trio up till now, but with the arrival of Dawson's new next-door neighbor, 15-year-old Jen Lindley (Michelle Williams), things begin to heat up a bit. Joey is jealous because Dawson clearly likes Jen, Pacey is jealous of Joey because he likes Jen, and Jen is stimulated by all the attention, having had far more carnal experience than Dawson, Joey, and Pacey combined. But Pacey is soon making up for lost time, losing his virginity to his attractive teacher, Ms. Tamara Jacobs (Leann Hunley), who is forced to leave town to avoid a scandal. Pacey's friends' romantic adventures are somewhat more chaste, with both Dawson and Joey enjoying their first kisses (though not as yet with each other) in the course of the season. Later on, flirtatious Jen breaks Dawson's heart, but comes to regret her actions. On a less frolicsome note, Dawson finds out that his TV-newsperson mother, Gail (Mary-Margaret Humes), is cheating on Dawson's dad, Mitch (John Wesley Shipp). As in future seasons, movie references abound during season one of Dawson's Creek, notably in the episode "Detention," a virtual remake of The Breakfast Club. The season ends with Dawson and Joey realizing that there is something wonderful between them, thanks to a long and passionate kiss (minus the expected discreet fade out!). But nothing may come of this, since Joey seems poised to move to France. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- James Van Der Beek, Katie Holmes, (more)
Dawson (James Van Der Beek) decides to make Jen (Michelle Williams) the lead in the no-budget horror film he is making for a film festival. Jealousy rears its ugly head when Joey (Katie Holmes) sees that Dawson and Jen's relationship might be more than director/actress. Dawson is in for his own battle with the green monster when Jen accepts an offer to attend a dance with football player Cliff (Scott Foley). Tamara (Leann Hunley) instructs Pacey (Joshua Jackson) that she does not appreciate his continued advances to her. Joey confronts Gail (Mary-Margaret Humes) about her possibly cheating on Mitch (John Wesley Shipp). ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- James Van Der Beek, Katie Holmes, (more)
The debut episode of the hit teen drama Dawson's Creek introduced audiences to Dawson Leery (James Van Der Beek), a 15-year-old film enthusiast who desires a career as a director, and his lifelong best friend, Joey Potter (Katie Holmes). The two have spent many a Saturday night watching movies in Dawson's room, but their maturing bodies have complicated the situation and made them rethink their weekly sleepovers. Emotions get sticky when the neighbor's granddaughter, Jennifer Lindley (Michelle Williams), moves in next door and sparks Dawson's budding sexual awareness. Dawson's smart-alecky friend Pacey Witter (Joshua Jackson) adventurously begins hitting on an older woman, who turns out to be the new Capeside High English teacher, Tamara Jacobs (Leann Hunley). The episode also introduces Dawson's devoted parents, Mitch (John Wesley Shipp) and Gail (Mary-Margaret Humes), whose devotion to each other will soon be tested. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- James Van Der Beek, Katie Holmes, (more)
Dawson (James Van Der Beek) is confronted with his feelings of inferiority when Jen's (Michelle Williams) ex-boyfriend Billy (Eion Bailey) comes to visit and convinces Jen to ditch school to spend the day with him. Pacey (Joshua Jackson) and Joey (Katie Holmes) have a discussion about her feelings for Dawson. Meanwhile, life in the Leery household is tension-filled, as Gail (Mary-Margaret Humes) and Mitch (John Wesley Shipp) are having a rough time trying to rebuild their marriage. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- James Van Der Beek, Katie Holmes, (more)
In an obvious homage to The Breakfast Club, this episode of Dawson's Creek finds Dawson (James Van Der Beek), Joey (Katie Holmes), Pacey (Joshua Jackson), and Jen (Michelle Williams) serving an eight-hour Saturday detention along with class bad girl Abby (Monica Keena). After tensions between Pacey and Dawson, as well as Jen and Joey, heat up for a variety of reasons, a game of truth or dare ends in a kiss that may cause all kinds of emotional ramifications. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- James Van Der Beek, Katie Holmes, (more)
Still upset about his breakup with Jen (Michelle Williams), Dawson (James Van Der Beek) lies to Mary Beth (Megahn Perry) so that she will join him on a double date with Jen and Cliff (Scott Foley). His jealousy reveals itself over the course of the evening. Meanwhile, the relationship between Pacey (Joshua Jackson) and Joey (Katie Holmes) goes through some subtle changes as they work together on a school science project. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- James Van Der Beek, Katie Holmes, (more)
After Jen (Michelle Williams) breaks up with him, Dawson (James Van Der Beek) sets out on a road trip with Pacey (Joshua Jackson) and Billy (Eion Bailey). They end up at a college bar where Dawson finds some success with a female film student. After football player Warren Goering (Eric Balfour) begins a rumor that Joey (Katie Holmes) had sex with him, Jen hatches an elaborate plot to humiliate Warren. But the plan leads to some unexpected complications. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- James Van Der Beek, Katie Holmes, (more)
Dawson's world is upended from many different directions in this episode of Dawson's Creek. He discovers that Pacey (Joshua Jackson) is having a sexual relationship with English teacher Tamara Jacobs (Leann Hunley). Dawson also learns that his mother has been having an affair, and that Joey (Katie Holmes) has known about it and did not tell him. While explaining all of his anger and frustration to Jen (Michelle Williams), she confesses that her parents moved her to Capeside after a period of drug and sexual excess in New York City. Dawson has difficulty accepting her wild past. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- James Van Der Beek, Katie Holmes, (more)
Dawson (James Van Der Beek) plots the perfect location to share his first kiss with Jen (Michelle Williams), but his plans are threatened when he is forced to take part in a class film project. Joey (Katie Holmes) lies about herself in order to impress a new boy in town. Tamara (Leann Hunley) begins to weaken due to Pacey's (Joshua Jackson) incessant and charming flirtations. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- James Van Der Beek, Katie Holmes, (more)
When Bessie (Nina Repeta) goes into labor early, retired nurse Grams (Mary Beth Peil) delivers the baby with help from Joey (Katie Holmes), Dawson (James Van Der Beek), and Jen (Michelle Williams) at the Leery home. Rumors of Tamara's (Leann Hunley) unethical behavior make their way to the higher-ups in the school, forcing Pacey (Joshua Jackson) to make a decision that he may have come to just a little too late. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- James Van Der Beek, Katie Holmes, (more)
As a hurricane roars into Capeside, Dawson (James Van Der Beek), Grams (Mary Beth Peil), Jen (Michelle Williams), Joey's very pregnant sister, Bessie (Nina Repeta), and her boyfriend, Bodie (Obi Ndefo), are trapped together at the Leery home. Gail (Mary-Margaret Humes) accepts that she must face the music in regards to her infidelity, while Dawson reaches the end of his emotional tether with all three of the women he cares about most. The good news for Pacey (Joshua Jackson) is that he is trapped with his lover, Tamara (Leann Hunley), the bad news is that his older brother, Doug Witter (Dylan Neal), is trapped with them. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- James Van Der Beek, Katie Holmes, (more)
Dawson (James Van Der Beek) cooks up some elaborate scares for his friends, but a séance turns particularly frightening when the group begins to suspect that the stranger in their midst may very well be an escaped serial killer. Cliff (Scott Foley), afraid he is not doing as well as he could with Jen (Michelle Williams), asks Dawson for advice on how to woo her. This episode is a thinly veiled homage to series creator Kevin Williamson's hit film Scream. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- James Van Der Beek, Katie Holmes, (more)
Joey (Katie Holmes), needing money for college, and Pacey, (Joshua Jackson) desperate for a place of his own to live, both enter a beauty contest that offers 5,000 dollars to the winner. Joey's appearance in the contest alters Dawson's (James Van Der Beek) perception of her. This makes Jen (Michelle Williams), already second-guessing herself about her decision to break up with Dawson, jealous. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- James Van Der Beek, Katie Holmes, (more)
Fathers and life decisions are the recurring themes on the first season finale of Dawson's Creek. Joey (Katie Holmes) must balance her new feelings for Dawson (James Van Der Beek) with the opportunity to live in France for a year. She must also visit her father on his birthday, even though he currently resides in prison. Pacey (Joshua Jackson) confronts his older brother about their respective relationships with their father. Jen (Michelle Williams) has reason to celebrate when her grandfather comes out of his coma, but becomes distraught when his health deteriorates. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- James Van Der Beek, Katie Holmes, (more)
Season two of Dawson's Creek picks up where season one left off, with the passionate kiss between 15-year-old aspiring filmmaker Dawson Leery (James Van Der Beek) and his lifelong friend Josephine "Joey" Potter (Katie Holmes). Still, it will be some time before Dawson and Joey surrender to the obvious fact that they are destined to be together forever. This season marks the first appearance of Andie McPhee (Meredith Monroe) and Andie's brother Jack (Kerr Smith), not to mention the manipulative Abby Morgan (Monica Keena), who wastes no time exerting her bad influence over Dawson's sexy next-door neighbor Jen Lindley (Michelle Williams). Meanwhile, Dawson's pal Pacey (Joshua Jackson) has an uncomfortable reunion with Tamara Jacobs (Leann Hunley), the English teacher to whom he had given up his virginity in the previous season. With Joey apparently interested only in newcomer Jack, Dawson goes back to Jen on the rebound, which turns out to be a really bad move. As it turns out, however, Jack is gay, and thus hardly a rival to Dawson. As for his sister Andie, she has a brief fling with the ever-willing Pacey -- and as a result of her parent's marital problems, Andie also suffers a nervous breakdown, which may force her to move out of Jack's life forever. Things aren't much more pleasant in the Leery home, as Dawson's parents, Gail (Mary-Margaret Humes) and Brian (John Wesley Shipp), decide to get a divorce. Using his "art" to release his emotions, Dawson starts filming a movie of his life, upsetting his friends and family -- and himself, when the finished product is roundly panned by a professional filmmaker. Just before the season closer, Jen joins Abby in a drinking binge, which ends disastrously when Abby falls off a bridge and drowns in the river. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- James Van Der Beek, Katie Holmes, (more)
Funded by the Ford Foundation, a one-act play by Wendy Kesselman about a teenage girl's coming of age was expanded to become the directorial debut of prominent casting director Billy Hopkins. Claire Danes stars as Daisy, a well-to-do but shy and bookish Manhattan teenager attending an exclusive prep school, keeping her Jewish identity a secret and harboring a secret crush on the school's star athlete Ethan Wells (Jude Law). The only person in Daisy's life that she feels comfortable opening up to is her grandmother, Nana (Jeanne Moreau), a Holocaust survivor who shares with her granddaughter an affinity for flowers. As Nana relates tragic stories of the horrors experienced in her youth (seen in flashbacks featuring Danes as the young Moreau), she becomes a guide of sorts for Daisy through her difficult adolescence. Ethan eventually notices Daisy's attention and begins courting her, but then Daisy's Jewish heritage is discovered by her snooty classmates, leading to a campaign of anti-Semitism and a truncated romance for the broken-hearted Daisy, who now needs Nana's compassion more than ever. ~ Karl Williams, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Jeanne Moreau, Claire Danes, (more)
Hayao Miyazaki's fantasy adventure Castle in the Sky begins with a chase scene through a flying ship, where all the passengers are after the young girl, Sheeta (voice of Anna Paquin). Going overboard to avoid capture, Sheeta is rescued by her powerful crystal necklace which floats her down to safety. She's recovered by Pazu (voice of James Van Der Beek), a young resourceful boy who works in a small mining town. Sharing a common desire to see Laputa, the castle in the sky, Pazu and Sheeta team up to outrun the pirates and the military. Led by hard-bitten matriarch Dola (voice of Cloris Leachman), the pirates are a rowdy yet dimwitted group of brothers who are after Laputa's treasure. Led by the greedy yet civilized Muska (voice of Mark Hamill), the military is after Laputa's secret powers. Everyone races to get to the abandoned castle of Laputa, which has been overgrown with vines and plant life. Its only inhabitants are the animals and robots who protect a magical garden. As the different parties fight over who gets to control Laputa, it's up to Sheeta to use her ancient knowledge to save it from ultimate destruction. The English-language version also includes the voices of Mandy Patinkin and Andy Dick. ~ Andrea LeVasseur, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- James Van Der Beek, Anna Paquin, (more)






















