| City of Hope | |
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Theatrical Poster |
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| Directed by | John Sayles |
| Produced by | Harold Welb John Sloss |
| Written by | John Sayles |
| Starring | Vincent Spano Stephen Mendillo Chris Cooper |
| Music by | Mason Daring |
| Cinematography | Robert Richardson |
| Editing by | John Sayles |
| Distributed by | Esperanza Films The Samuel Goldwyn Company |
| Release date(s) | October 11, 1991 |
| Running time | 129 minutes |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
| Allmovie profile | |
| IMDb profile | |
City of Hope (1991) is an American drama film written and directed by John Sayles. The film features Vincent Spano, Stephen Mendillo and Chris Cooper.[1]
The film tells the story of Nick Rinaldi (Vincent Spano), who has spent his life in one New Jersey city, getting a free ride from his well-connected father (Tony LoBianco) and hearing the locals talk of his brother's death in Vietnam. He's usually high on drink and drugs.
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As Rinaldi searches for more self control, he quits the contractor's job provided by his father, feeling that major events are about to happen in his life.
By the film's end his life will change, as will the lives of many others.
Film critic Roger Ebert wrote, "City of Hope is a powerful film, and an angry one. It is impossible not to find echoes of its despair on the front pages every day. It asks a hard question: Is it possible for a good person to prevail in a corrupt system, just simply because right is on his side? The answer, in the short run, is that power is stronger than right. The notion of a long run, of course, is all that keeps hope alive."[2]
The staff at Variety magazine wrote, "John Sayles' ambitious, wide-ranging study of corruption and community in a small Eastern city has as many parallel plots and characters as Hill Street Blues, while at the same time having a richness of theme and specificity of vision more common to serious cinema."[3]
Film critics Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat wrote about the varied aspects of the film, writing, "Through the diverse activities of over three dozen characters in this film, we see some of the major challenges of urban living including crime, political chicanery, the patronage system, the demise of the work ethic, the rapacious side of capitalism, and the high cost of civic apathy. City of Hope helps us see that community is enriched or torn apart by the ethical decisions we make every day."[4]
The review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reported that 93% of critics gave the film a positive review, based on 15 reviews."[5]
The producers used the following tagline to market the film:
The film premiered in Baltimore, Boston, and New York City, on October 11, 1991.
The film was screened at various film festivals, including: the Deauville Film Festival, France; the Tokyo International Film Festival, Japan; and others.
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