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WEEK IN REVIEW
Wednesday


Kimberly-Clark keeps closer eye on its Everett ...
Owners protest Monroe plan for 'potentially dan...
Marysville man charged in fatal shooting of 6-y...
Tuesday


Girl, 6, fatally shot; father jailed
Century-old Arlington house succumbs to flames
In Snohomish and other cities, sales tax revenu...
Monday


Economy forces teens to cope with smaller allow...
Tax hike sought to clean up Puget Sound
Oso residents want to use old school as communi...
Sunday


Monroe may toughen rules for some dog breeds
County preparations kept flood rescues to minimum
It's playtime, maties
Saturday


A mom and dad of her own
Deal likely to avert strike of Boeing engineers
Sultan eliminates its police department
Friday


Snohomish County flooding was less severe than ...
Water warning a pain for some Snohomish restaur...
Arlington High's 'Peter Pan' takes to the air
Thursday


Snohomish County flooding isn't over yet
Gas leak forces kids from school
Skate America brought county about $3 million f...
 

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CONTACT THE HERALD
Melanie Munk, Features Editor
munk@heraldnet.com
 
Published: Friday, August 8, 2008

'Bottle Shock' has it all: wine, old trucks, Rickman

Perhaps "Bottle Shock" should have been called "The Grapes of Froth" because it tells such a happy story: How the vintners of Napa Valley won the blind tasting known as the "Judgment of Paris" in 1976 and put their little piece of California paradise on the world wine stage for all time. What a movie: booze, unhappy French people, Alan Rickman and really cool pickup trucks.

The trucks are all over the place, along with a one-eyed, limping, primer-smeared VW Beetle, as symbols of the surfer/hippie-like culture that prevailed in Napa in those years, before it acquired swank, class and really expensive motels.

Rickman plays Steven Spurrier, a Brit wine merchant in Paris who is prevailed upon to sponsor, arrange and produce the judgment, which, alas, compels him to visit the Colonies, where his snobbery gets a comeuppance, Yank-style.

Director Randall Miller uses the tasting as the spine of the story and at the same time gets at other dramatic issues. The film is also a study of the landscape of Napa. And it chronicles a generational conflict between the Barrett boys, as dad Jim (Bill Pullman) tries to get son Bo (Chris Pine) to knuckle down and take some responsibility while they attempt to turn out the perfect chardonnay in California's dustiest valley.

The movie is constructed as a cavalcade, cutting back and forth between venues. It spends some time in Paris. Then it goes to Napa, where various domestic complexities are preventing the battlin' Barretts from putting out the world's best potable. Pullman has put on weight and looks every inch the beleaguered patriarch, fighting off banks on the one hand and the vicissitudes of nature with the other and occasionally putting on the boxing gloves with his son, who'd rather party hearty late into the night.

Other issues are evoked less successfully. But the central narrative stays with the distinguished English aristo wandering hopelessly about the rustic valley and getting an education. Pullman and Rickman have a few great scenes together as they scuffle and paw at each other.

What makes "Bottle Shock" so rewarding, however, is something subtler. Everyone in it simply loves wine. I'm guessing that includes the director and the producers and probably the investors and the key grips.

The movie builds steadily toward its invocation of the tasting. It's a great scene (so great that another movie is forthcoming on the "Judgment of Paris" in the near future) and the movie, though not itself great, offers a lot of fun for those of us who like our wine cold, our Rickman tart, our pickups rusted out and our French people deeply unhappy.

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