Something went wrong
Try again later.
Nights in Rodanthe
As a storm approaches the coast, Paul, a doctor tormented by a crisis of conscience who is traveling to see his estranged son, and Adrienne, whose life is in chaos, find comfort and a life-changing romance.
26 April 1978, Ymir, British Columbia, Canada
19 April 1978, Palo Alto, California, USA
17 February 1953, Fort Knox, Kentucky, USA
23 October 1926, Columbus, Ohio, USA
26 June 1985, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA
15 January 1982, Raleigh, North Carolina, USA
19 September 1959, Midland, Texas, USA
22 January 1965, New York City, New York, USA
9 June 1988, Los Angeles, California, USA
March 04, 2009
A movie that looks and sounds a whole lot bigger than it actually is.February 11, 2009
You could have filmed zombies in a gorgeous 19th century beach house and gotten the same emotional impact.September 26, 2008
What really sells this three-hanky tear-jerker -- and there were a lot of women buying it during a recent screening -- is Lane's steely and vulnerable performance. Like Tinker Bell, she almost made me believe in fairies. Almost.November 23, 2009
...the film ultimately earns a place for itself within the pantheon of effectively stirring romantic tearjerkers.February 10, 2009
Even if you are rooting for this film to succeed, you find yourself sitting through the tear-jerking part of the movie without feeling terribly wrapped up in it.November 05, 2008
Most of the movie was cloying. All of it was predictable.February 15, 2009
While it may be discerned as more a vehicle for the actors' reunion than a creative gem, the contributive factor to its attractiveness is the chemistry of the match.April 14, 2012
So nondescript that its anonymity becomes its very personality.October 18, 2008
The comparative savvy that Wolfe showed in HBO's stage-to-TV transfer of Lackawanna Blues has gone missing.November 05, 2008
Something about Diane Lane's performance, especially in that third act, really got me involved in the film emotionally.October 10, 2008
Broadway director George C Wolfe's inexperience with visual storytelling makes everything go with a clunk. Shame.