Stacking (1987) Poster

(1987)

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10/10
Much better than the average rating
PERITAS20 September 2003
This is one of my favorite movies ever. Great acting, beautiful soundtrack (old-timey bluegrass - where's the album??), compelling story. A 1950's Montana family is about to lose the farm due to husband's injury. Wife (Christine Lahti) is at the end of her rope and wants to chuck it all and start over. Teenage daughter (the wonderful Megan Follows), is determined to save the farm. She enlists the help of local ne'er-do-well Frederic Forrest, and love/drama/drinking/fighting/dancing ensues. I loved the cinematography - although filmed in color, one almost gets the sense that it's in b&w because the era portrayed is evoked so effectively. Very strong performances by Follows, Lahti & Forrest, and a nice job by a young Jason Gedrick. Very overlooked film - give it a try.
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4/10
So much potential overloaded with excruciating detail.
mark.waltz2 October 2018
Warning: Spoilers
This film starts with great promise but sadly slows down to a near thud as it develops its plot that has far too many characters, not enough time to develop them all, and ends up as much of a let-down for the audience as it does for the characters who are struggling either to make life work or to find a life or to get over the issues of life they find blocks them from being themselves. The cast is undeniably excellent, with veterans of the New York stage coming in for rare film roles, with one true break-out performance (Megan Follows) who becomes the heart and soul of her community thanks to her tenacity and ability to rise above everything going around her. Christine Lahti is the hard working wife of Montana farmer Ray Baker, recently injured in an accident, and unable to get the usual supply of hay ready for selling. Lahti struggles to maintain her tough facade, but it soon becomes clear that she's ready to pack it all in and run away. That's where the dedication of daughter Follows comes in as she is not willing to see everything they've worked together to achieve fall apart because of an apparent mid-life crisis and lose the farm to those they owe money to.

Follows is giving a charming young leading man with Jason Gedrick who charms her with the rattle of a snake that he just killed. A little bit of the history of the community is told through the presence of his grandmother (the wonderful Jacqueline Brookes), and even more with the cameo by stage/soap actress Irene Dailey as the tired mother of Frederic Forrest, a lifelong friend of Lahti's and Baker's. Dailey, then on a break from her 20 year role as busybody matriarch Liz Matthews on "Another World", sits with a lamb in her arms as she discusses the issues her son is going through, and it made me want so much more of her and Brookes. (Ironically, the two worked together briefly when Ms. Brookes had a regular role on "AW" the previous decade). This came out during a period of film history when rural films were being made fairly regularly ("Places in the Heart", "Cross Creek", "The River", "Country") to name a few, and while it has some admirable qualities, I found it too slow moving and so overwhelmed in plot that it really didn't have a strong enough story to keep my interest.
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9/10
A wonderful bit of Americana, beautifully shot on location in Montana
robert-temple-122 March 2014
This film, written by Victoria Jenkins (who has gone on to write four novels since then), was also released on video under the title SEASON OF DREAMS (a release title not noted in the IMDb listing). It is set in the small town of Lavina, Montana, in 1954. It was a TV movie made for the American Playhouse series of PBS and has never been released on DVD, though it is possible to obtain old videos of it, such as I have. It is a beautiful and elegiac story of a young tomboy named Anna Mae, aged only 14, who struggles to keep the family farm going despite her useless and dissolute father (who is in hospital with a shattered arm) and a restless mother who is going to pieces, and finally abandons her to run off to California. The part of Anna Mae is played by Megan Follows, who despite being 18 at the time, looks young enough for the part. She started acting on television at the age of 9, so she was very skilled by this time. She does a superb job of carrying the film by her strong performance, which is a real feat for a teenager. This film was made on location and is so authentic you feel you can reach out and touch the hay bales as they are being stacked (hence the title of the story, STACKING). Frederic Forrest does a wonderful job also of playing Buster, a failed local farmhand who redeems himself by helping Anna Mae without pay to save what is left of her farm which has been in the family for four generations. Peter Coyote appears in a cameo role as a photographer passing through on his motorcycle. Christine Lahti plays the mother of the girl, oscillating between nice and self-centred, as she slowly disintegrates under the pressures of her nowhere life and then runs away to an even less certain future. There are some wonderful shots of the wild Montana scenery, and a superb scene of a cattle sale with a genuine local auctioneer reeling off his prices with his tongue twisting faster than the speed of light, just like my cousin Charlie Hainline used to do. That, I believe, is fast becoming a lost art, or maybe already is. The beat-up vehicles (one painted in that cherry red with a matt finish which was used in the fifties), the creaky old tractors, the local fiddler from Billings with his string band, the wind-swept and vacant streets and roads, the ill-kept shacks with flies and mosquitoes and sagging screen doors and the old 'ice box', the café with cherry pie so bad you can't swallow it, the bottles of coke and beer being swilled down all the time in the heat, all of that really brings it all back to anyone who can go back that far. This film is so evocative and real that it is the antithesis of Hollywood and reminds us of just how good Lindsay Law's American Playhouse series (commencing 1981) really was, and what a contribution it made to keeping quality alive in the USA. If only all of its productions, instead of only a few, were available on DVD, I am sure there would be plenty of people wanting to buy the entire set, such as myself for a start. The films in that series take on more cultural value as time goes by, and as a lasting testament to authenticity and quality produced without sloppy sentimentality or Tinsel Town affectation, they should be preserved and made available in their entirety as a lasting record of when things were done right.
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