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Off The Map (2005) Movie Information:
Off The Map (2005) Directed by:
Campbell Scott
Off The Map (2005) Written by:
Joan Ackermann
Off The Map (2005) Cast:
Joan Allen, J Simmons, Sam Elliott, Valentina deAngelis, Amy Brenneman, Kevin Skousen, Jim True-Frost, Boots Southern, J.D. Garfield, Matthew Montoya
Off The Map (2005) U.S. Distributor:
Manhattan Pictures International
Off The Map (2005) U.K. Distributor:
Not available at this time
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Off The Map (2005) Synopsis:

Bo is a young girl, living in rural New Mexico, who yearns to feel a connection to the world she perceives as beginning outside the lines of her tiny town. Her father is depressed; her mother is the archetype of an earth mother. Bo meanwhile writes to various snack-cake manufacturers describing the ailments their products have given her and requesting replacements. But the family grows its own food and has a stockpile of firewood that will last years. That sets the stage for the visit from the IRS, sent to see why the family hasn't filed any income taxes.

Off The Map (2005) Movie Review:


“Off the Map” should put Taos on the moviemaking map. Shot almost entirely in that picturesque New Mexico area, this magical film evokes the same feeling I had while watching two of my favorite classic films, “To Kill a Mockingbird” and “Shane.” All three movies, alive with a sense of place, feature youngsters who reach out and touch your heart as they react to the strange adult world around them.


In “Off the Map,” 12-year old Bo Groden (Valentina de Angelis) tries to make the best of things -- even though her father Charley (Sam Elliott) suffers severe depression and her mother Arlene (Joan Allen) does her gardening in the nude. The Grodens live hand-to-mouth -- hunting and raising their own food, making their own clothes, and so forth. The precocious Bo obtains a few luxuries by writing letters of complaint to companies, who then send her various products such as cupcakes and chewing gum. She also passes the time going fishing with family friend George (J.K. Simmons) and by fantasizing about future careers.


Everything changes when IRS Agent William Gibbs (Jim True-Frost) comes to audit the Grodens. Bo develops a crush on William and his briefcase; William falls for Arlene; and Charley meets someone with more reasons to be depressed than he has. Thanks to Campbell Scott, making his directing debut here, “Off the Map” is an old-fashioned movie that takes its time depicting human relationships. Long, fluid scenes replace those frenzied cutaway shots so popular with most of today’s filmmakers. As a result, each character became important to me, and I cared deeply about what happened to the Groden family as well as to their two friends.


Performances of great beauty enhance this unique movie. If newcomer de Angelis doesn’t end up as a big star, I’ll be completely surprised. With her expressive face and body language, she’s a natural. Allen (“The Contender”), playing against type, is the perfect earth-mother. Both True-Frost (“Affliction”) and Simmons (the psychiatrist in television’s “Law and Order”) provide poignant comedy relief. But it’s Elliott (“We Were Soldiers”) who amazed me the most. I’ve always believed Elliott’s deep, gravelly voice was the key to his acting appeal, but in “Off the Map” he speaks very little until well into the film, yet he’s still mesmerizing.


No wonder Campbell Scott won the 2003 Taos Talking Picture Land Land Grant Award for this wonderful film. Hopefully, that honor will be the first of many for “Off the Map.”

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Off The Map (2005) review written by: Betty Jo Tucker

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