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The New Age (1994)
Released By: Warner Home Video   Rating: R   In Theaters: N/A
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Studio: Warner Home Video
Genre: Comedy
MPAA Rating: R
Director: Michael Tolkin
Language: English
Official Website: N/A
Theatrical Release: N/A
Home Video Release: N/A
Cast: Adam West, Corbin Bernsen, Judy Davis, Patrick Bauchau, Peter Weller, Samuel L. Jackson
Published ID: 5351
UPC: N/A
Plot: A wealthy Beverly Hills husband and wife are forced to reevaluate their lives after losing their jobs in writer-director Michael Tolkin's aloof satire. Peter Witner (Peter Weller) and Katherine Witner (Judy Davis) have become so accustomed to their high-class, shallow lifestyle that they feel helpless when circumstances leave them facing imminent bankruptcy. Lost and confused, their marriage on the verge of collapse, they seek help from a number of spiritual gurus, who offer ineffectual New Age philosophies as the solution to their problems. These remedies provide little comfort, however, and the Witners' attempt to make their own way by opening a hip clothing store also disappoints, leaving them ostracized and desperate for a direction in life. Best known for the cutting screenplay of Robert Altman's The Player (1992) and for his own earlier film The Rapture (1991), Tolkin provides sharp dialogue and a well-observed critique of the Los Angeles high life. This film continues the social criticism of those earlier efforts, as Tolkin consistently portrays American life as mindlessly materialistic, spiritually hollow, and bereft of meaningful purpose or moral direction. While some viewers may feel distanced from the unsympathetic characters and detached tone, Tolkin continues to be one of the most trenchant social satirists in contemporary American movies. ~ Judd Blaise, All Movie Guide
IDDateTimeTitleReviewHelpfulVotesTotalVotes
Where is the DVD for Peter Witner's Sake?!
Added 4/22/2007

This is still one of the sharpest dark comedies around about LA and failed yuppie dreams I have ever seen. Makes everything Steve Martin attempts to be as lame AS THEY ARE. Infinitely quotable lines: "Money isn't money! Money is a representation of something else!" Peter Weller and Judy Davis were pitch perfect. The NEW AGE trappings that abound in the movie are not just scattershot- there is a flirtation with BDSM, there is alternative cures for Cancer, there is applied and mis-applied Taoist and Buddhist philosophy and there is real satire on the Consumerist Culture. Plus there is Patricia Heaton before garish flaming red hair and multiple cosmetic surgeries!

For a kind of similar experience, see Albert Brooks' "Lost in America."
Then re-think "American Beauty."

THIS FILM is NOT a MESS, and I'd be thankful if folks who "review" in that vein would at least back up their opinions with some
discussion about the film itself beyond one sentence.

Please powers that own the rights to this film- release the DVD as every old VHS I've scrounged up plays like they were baking in the bargain bin sun at the dollar store's front window.

4 out of 4 people found this helpful.
The best film ever made about LA
Added 6/19/2002

Ten years after its release, Steve Martin's LA Story has a cult following for its adept interpretation of vapid and decadent Los Angelinos. Though LA Story came out in 1990 and seems to lampoon the 80s, Michael Tolkin goes way beyond his collaborative work with Robert Altman(The Player) with this pitch black comedy.

The film is way ahead of its time. Hollywood has yet to examine the decadent 90s in any way. Here we have characters who are more Clinton era than American Beauty. Pretty astute, considering that the film was released in 1994!

Look for top performances from Peter Weller, Judy Davis, and great supporting work from Adam West, Sandra Seacat, and a pre-Pulp Fiction Samuel Jackson. Hopefully, some of the great camera work an slick visuals will find its way on to DVD in the near future.


9 out of 10 people found this helpful.
maria ellingsen wasted- i got lost watching it
Added 9/27/2001

This film is a mess. It features a load of stars and made no sense at all. The great Icelandic actress Maria Ellingsen appears once or twice and is her exceptional skills are wasted in this mess. I wouldn't recommend this to anyone.
1 out of 14 people found this helpful.
A brisk stroll through Yuppie hell
Added 10/6/2000

Michael Tolkin's "The New Age" was the most scathing movie indictment of the American dream gone Sonoma catalog since Albert Brooks' brilliant satire "Lost In America". "The New Age" re-teams the "Tracy & Hepburn" of indie film, Peter Weller and Judy Davis, who were also the wacked-out couple in "Naked Lunch". Instead of heading off in an RV to go "find themselves", Judy and Peter decide to "simplify" thier over-extended Yuppie lifestyle by chucking it all and opening up a Beverly Hills boutique. Hilarity ensues....right? Actually, the movie takes a more low-key,sometimes cruel, black comedy approach to its subjects as they proceed to go into a tandem midlife crisis. Along the way, most trendy southern California fads are lampooned, recalling the film "Serial", which savaged the Bay Area Yuppie/New Age scene in the same fashion. Good supporting performances abound; the biggest surprise is Adam "Batman" West, who is priceless as Weller's father. West plays the wryly acerbic, aging Lothario with much aplomb.(Where has he been?!) Highly recommended.
8 out of 9 people found this helpful.
I like Michael Tolkin, okay?
Added 2/5/1999

This movie meant a lot more to me after I lived in Phoenix, Arizona for a year, which is as far west as I want to go for the rest of my life. It's much more interesting to observe empty, soul-less people from a safe distance. It's funny. See "The Rapture," too. Thanks.
6 out of 10 people found this helpful.
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