Autumn in New York (2001)
Autumn in New York Image Cover
Additional Images
Director:Joan Chen
Studio:MGM (Video & DVD)
Producer:Gary Lucchesi, Tom Rosenberg, Amy Robinson
Writer:Allison Burnett
Rating:8
Rated:PG-13
Date Added:2012-11-30
Last Seen:2019-03-17
UPC:000000000140
Price:$14.98
Awards:1 nomination
Genre:Drama
Release:2001-01-02
IMDb:0174480
Location:1141
Duration:104
Aspect Ratio:1.33:1
Sound:Dolby Digital 2.0
Languages:English, Spanish, French
Subtitles:Spanish, French
Features:Scene Access
Trailer
Joan Chen  ...  (Director)
Allison Burnett  ...  (Writer)
 
Richard Gere  ...  Will Keane
Winona Ryder  ...  Charlotte Fielding
Anthony LaPaglia  ...  John
Joan Chen  ...  
Elaine Stritch  ...  Dolly
Vera Farmiga  ...  Lisa Tyler
Tom Rosenberg  ...  
Sherry Stringfield  ...  Sarah
Gary Lucchesi  ...  
Jill Hennessy  ...  Lynn McCale
Amy Robinson  ...  
J.K. Simmons  ...  Dr. Tom Grandy
Sam Trammell  ...  Simon
Mary Beth Hurt  ...  Dr. Sibley
Kali Rocha  ...  Shannon
Steven Randazzo  ...  Alberto
Toby Poser  ...  Autumn Woman #1
George Spielvogel III  ...  Netto
Edgar Selge  ...  
Ranjit Chowdhry  ...  Fakir
Andrea Sawatzki  ...  
Moritz Bleibtreu  ...  
Christian Berkel  ...  
Oliver Stokowski  ...  
Timo Dierkes  ...  
Lars Gärtner  ...  
Wotan Wilke Möhring  ...  
Stephan Szasz  ...  
Polat Dal  ...  
Danny Richter  ...  
Ralf Müller  ...  
Markus Rudolf  ...  
Peter Fieseler  ...  
Thorsten Dersch  ...  
Sven Grefer  ...  
Justus von Dohnányi  ...  
Nicki von Tempelhoff  ...  
Antoine Monot Jr.  ...  
Jacek Klimontko  ...  
Markus Klauk  ...  
Ralph Püttmann  ...  
Philipp Hochmair  ...  
Klaus Spinnler  ...  
Tristan Vostry  ...  
Maren Eggert  ...  
André Jung  ...  
Uwe Rohde  ...  
Heiner Lauterbach  ...  
Fatih Akin  ...  
Christiane Gerboth  ...  
Summary: Autumn in New York is a by-the-numbers love story, right down to its opening shot of, yes, autumn in New York. Richard Gere stars as restaurateur/lady's man Will, while Winona Ryder plays the airy-fairy, oh-too-delicate-for-this-world Charlotte. Will is 48, Charlotte is 22, and it just keeps getting creepier: Will actually used to hang out with Charlotte's mom. She plays artily with beads and sparkly things, he notices how elfin and different she is (inspiring such stomach-churning dialogue as "I find you completely unprecedented and therefore utterly unpredictable"), and soon they're in love. Ah, but it's doomed: she has a tumor in her heart (just in case you missed the significance, Charlotte says "I'm sick in my heart!"). Does Charlotte have enough time left to teach Will to truly love? While Gere does a stoic job, Ryder spends a lot of time being darling and winsome, aided by the fact that Charlotte has managed to catch one of those special movie diseases where you never look bad or get tubes stuck up your nose. Director Joan Chen doesn't have much of a script to work with, but at least she knows how to pick a cinematographer; the whole movie is shot in gorgeous fall-leaf colors. Several excellent supporting actors are trapped in this movie: Jill Hennessey and Anthony LaPaglia do their very best, but what can they do in the face of such a sweeping, creepy love? Autumn in New York is nothing if not an earnest movie, and it certainly means well. Much like Charlotte, it seems to cry, "Can you let me love you? Please?" No. --Ali Davis