An eleven-year-old girl watches her father come down with a crippling depression. Over one summer, she learns answers to several mysteries, and comes to terms with love and loss.An eleven-year-old girl watches her father come down with a crippling depression. Over one summer, she learns answers to several mysteries, and comes to terms with love and loss.An eleven-year-old girl watches her father come down with a crippling depression. Over one summer, she learns answers to several mysteries, and comes to terms with love and loss.
- Awards
- 2 wins & 1 nomination total
- Store Clerk
- (as Matthew Montoya)
- Interpreter
- (as Fr. William Hart McNichols)
- Priest
- (as Fr. Timothy Martinez)
- Don
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe movie took place in 1974, as a radio played Richard Nixon's resignation announcement during one scene.
- Quotes
Charley: I'm going crazy, George, crazy. It's these damn drugs. I feel like strangling something. I feel like going out in the yard and strangling that damn goat! I'm dangerous.
George: Sit down.
Charley: Sit down? Look at me! Can I sit down? I just walked twenty miles! I mean look at my legs, they're still moving, Look at 'em!
George: Have a beer.
Charley: Beer? I can't have a beer. I'm not supposed to drink alcohol with these damn drugs. I'm gonna have to murder someone! Ok, I'll have a beer.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Anatomy of a Scene: Off the Map (2004)
There wasn't a single relationship in this film that wasn't unique and fully realized. We've seen these set-ups before: the school-girl crush of Bo for William Gibbs, the awe-inspired worship of William for Arlene, the friendship between Charley and George. But don't we always get the caricatures, the popcorn images that point out the woeful arrested development of our country and its mythmakers? We think we want to be young forever. But it takes a film like "Off the Map" to show us all the richness we're missing out on by not growing up. (And the casting and direction of this ensemble of actors was nothing short of genius, especially Joan Allen. It's nice someone can see her as something more than middle-class white bread and pull this very individualistic performance out of her.)
I'm feeling kind of emotional just thinking about some to the great scenes in this film: when Charley runs 20 miles to George's house and goads him into wrestling; when Charley and William talk about what it feels like to be depressed; when William watches Arlene standing naked in her garden watching the totemic coyote; when Bo extracts from George the information she needs to apply for a MasterCharge card; Arlene reading Bo's letter in the newspaper advice column; Bo thanking the squirrel for giving up its life to feed her and her family; George's presence, like an old pair of sneakers, in the Groden home.
Like I said before, I didn't think people made films like this anymore. Thank you, Campbell Scott, for proving me wrong.
- Marnielover
- Mar 16, 2003
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Languages
- Also known as
- Вне карты
- Filming locations
- US-285 & New Mexico 567, Taos, New Mexico, USA(Maria's Taos Junction Cafe Bar is just north of this intersection)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $1,317,167
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $50,865
- Mar 13, 2005
- Gross worldwide
- $1,319,492
- Runtime1 hour 45 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1