13
Jul/12

UNION SQUARE

13
Jul/12

Tammy Blanchard and Mira Sorvino play estranged sisters in UNION SQUARE

UNION SQUARE (Nancy Savoca, 2011)
Angelika Film Center
18 West Houston St. at Mercer St.
Opens Friday, July 13
www.theunionsquaremovie.com
www.angelikafilmcenter.com

Nancy Savoca’s Union Square arrives like an unwanted relative suddenly showing up on the doorstep carrying a heavy suitcase. But, as in real life, family often wins out as long-standing issues rise to the surface and are dealt with in both painful and humorous ways. As the film opens, the wild and wacky Lucy (Mira Sorvino) emerges from the Union Square subway station, ready for some shopping and a tryst with Jay, who angers and frustrates her by not wanting to see her. In a rage, an out-of-control Lucy visits her estranged sister, the tightly wound Jenny (Tammy Blanchard), insinuating herself into her life, deciding that she and her dog, Murray, just have to stay there for a little while until she gets herself together. Jenny is disgusted, embarrassed, and annoyed by her freewheeling, overemotional sister, who drinks, smokes, and says what’s on her mind, whereas Jenny has carved out a carefully constructed existence for herself, pretending she is a good girl from Maine instead of a woman with a past from the Bronx, as she prepares to marry the preppy, organic, and health-obsessed Bill (Mike Doyle). Things come to a head on Thanksgiving, when secrets are revealed and everyone has to face some hard truths. Although inconsistent and, like Lucy, extremely annoying at first, Union Square, featuring a bumpy script by Savoca (Dogfight, Household Saints) and Mary Tobler and cameos by Daphne Rubin-Vega, Michael Rispoli, and Patti LuPone, eventually settles down as the two sisters slowly reconnect. The eighty-minute film was made on a shoestring budget with a skeleton crew and shot by Lisa Leone in HD using the small, handheld Canon 5D, with much of it set in producer Neda Armian’s real loft overlooking Union Square. Stick around for Madeleine Peyroux’s lovely rendition of Warren Zevon’s “Keep Me in Your Heart for a While,” which plays over the closing credits. Savoca will be on hand opening night at the Angelika for a Q&A following the 7:00 screening.