Message in a Bottle

A story of love lost and found.

6.3
19992h 11m

A woman finds a romantic letter in a bottle washed ashore and tracks down the author, a widowed shipbuilder whose wife died tragically early. As a deep and mutual attraction blossoms, the man struggles to make peace with his past so that he can move on and find happiness.

Production

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Trailers & Videos

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Trailer

Cast

Photo of Kevin Costner

Kevin Costner

Garrett Blake

Photo of Robin Wright

Robin Wright

Theresa Osborne

Photo of Paul Newman

Paul Newman

Dodge Blake

Photo of John Savage

John Savage

Johnny Land

Photo of Robbie Coltrane

Robbie Coltrane

Charlie Toschi

Photo of Jesse James

Jesse James

Jason Osborne

Photo of Bethel Leslie

Bethel Leslie

Marta Land

Photo of Tom Aldredge

Tom Aldredge

Hank Land

Photo of Rosemary Murphy

Rosemary Murphy

Helen at the B&B

Photo of Steven Eckholdt

Steven Eckholdt

David Osborne

Photo of Jennifer Lamb

Jennifer Lamb

Woman on Sinking Boat

Photo of Hayden Panettiere

Hayden Panettiere

Girl on Sinking Boat

Photo of Walt MacPherson

Walt MacPherson

Pete The Cop

Photo of Lance Gilbert

Lance Gilbert

Man On Sinking Boat

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Reviews

W

Wuchak

5/10

_**Enjoyable, but contrived, love story with some very puzzling questions**_

While on vacation in the Northeast a researcher for the Chicago Tribune (Robin Wright Penn) finds a romantic message in a bottle that is truly moving. After her editor prints the letter it becomes a hit and she travels to North Carolina to find the man who wrote the message (Keven Costner). Paul Newman is on hand as the latter’s father while John Savage plays his angry brother-in-law.

"Message in a Bottle" (1999) is an entertaining drama/romance with quality actors and East Coast locations. Unfortunately, parts of the contrived plot are too much of a stretch and some seriously perplexing questions are raised that I can’t detail without spoiling the movie for first-time viewers. Write me and I’ll share them with you.

Thankfully, there’s too much good to write the movie off as worthless. For instance, there’s a well-done subplot that has to do with manly antagonism and reconciliation. The average male has too much machismo to voice sappy apologies, but they clearly apologize & reconcile in less direct ways. Just read between the lines.

When Theresa asks Garrett, "Will you come and visit me,'' Roger Ebert complained about the (supposed) lousy writing of the latter’s response: "You mean, inland?'' I guess he failed to notice that Garrett had a smirk on his face and was playing with Theresa wherein she giggled.

Some people complain that the film was shot in Maine while the story takes place in The Outer Banks, North Carolina, which looks nothing like Maine and insults the intelligence of the viewer. In the producers’ defense, they tried to shoot in a couple places further south, but couldn’t get permits and so had to settle for Maine (Bath, New Harbor, Phippsburg & Portland). Yet the coastal scenery isn’t much of a focus, so it’s not that big of a deal. If it really bugs you, just imagine that Garrett throws the bottles into the ocean in Maine and Theresa finds the initial message while vacationing in Nova Scotia; problem solved.

The film runs 2 hours, 6 minutes, and was shot in Maine and Chicago, plus some stuff done at Falls Lake, Backlot, Universal Studios, Southern Cal.

GRADE: C

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