The Way Back (DVD)

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The Way Back (DVD)

The Way, Way Back is a 2013 American coming-of-age comedy-drama film written and directed by Nat Faxon and Jim Rash in their directorial debuts. It stars Liam James as Duncan, an introverted 14-year-old who goes on summer vacation to Wareham, Massachusetts with his mother and her overbearing boyfriend. It also stars Steve Carell, Toni Collette, Allison Janney, AnnaSophia Robb, Sam Rockwell, and Maya Rudolph, with Rob Corddry, Amanda Peet, Faxon, and Rash in supporting roles.

Faxon and Rash conceived the film in the early 2000s; however, it spent several years in development hell before funding could be secured. Eventually, Fox Searchlight Pictures (the same studio which distributed other independent films such as Little Miss Sunshine and Juno) agreed to distribute the film. Filming lasted several months during summer 2012. It premiered at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival, and had a wider release on July 5, 2013, where it received positive reviews and was a box office success, grossing $26.9 million against its $5 million budget.


Plot

Introverted 14-year-old Duncan from Albany, New York, reluctantly goes on summer vacation to a beach house in a small seaside town near Cape Cod, Massachusetts, with his mother, Pam; her wealthy boyfriend, Trent; and Trent s arrogant daughter, Steph. Trent emotionally belittles Duncan, frequently making comments and gestures that are condescending and rude to him. Steph follows suit in attitude towards him and is spoiled by Trent. On the way to the beach house, Trent asks Duncan to rate himself on a scale of one to ten; Duncan rates himself a six while Trent tells him he thinks Duncan is a three. They arrive at the beach house and are greeted by the neighbors: the gregarious, hard-drinking Betty, her children Susanna and Peter, and married couple Kip and Joan. Later that evening, Duncan and Susanna have an awkward conversation from their adjacent porches.

Duncan discovers a small girl s bicycle in the garage of the beach house and uses it to begin exploring the town. At a pizza restaurant, he runs into the staff of Water Wizz, the local water park. He meets Owen, who is playing Pac-Man, and eventually Owen takes Duncan under his wing and shows him around the park. Duncan meets the park s colorful, rag-tag group of employees: Caitlin, Lewis, and Roddy. Several youths at the water park speak reverently of a legendary pass in the tube slide, wondering how it could have been done. Owen hires Duncan for odd jobs at Water Wizz.

Outside the park, Duncan is continually neglected by his mother, Pam, who indulges in drinking, staying out at night, and smoking marijuana with other adult vacationers. At a Fourth of July cookout, Susanna sees that he is upset about this and invites him to go hunting for ghost crabs with her and Peter, where she talks about her absent father and helps Duncan open up. Later that night, Duncan witnesses Trent and Joan kissing by the side of the house, but does not reveal what he saw.

Pam begins to suspect Trent and Joan are having an affair, but Trent convinces her nothing is going on. Later, Duncan confronts Pam in front of friends and neighbors and tells her to face up to Trent s affair and get rid of him. Trent interjects, and Duncan insults and shoves him; Trent indignantly tells Duncan his divorced father does not want him. Duncan stalks away. Susanna follows him and comforts Duncan out on the beach. Duncan attempts to kiss Susanna, but she moves away, which makes him become even more upset. Accompanied by Peter, Duncan sneaks away to Water Wizz where Owen is throwing a going-away party for Lewis.

After spending all night with his friends at Water Wizz, Duncan is still at the park the next morning, refusing to leave. When Owen confronts him, Duncan opens up about his relationship with Trent and how the water park is the only place where he feels happy and accepted. Owen sympathizes with Duncan, recalling his upbringing where he was forced to abide to strict rules and patterns. He advises Duncan to disregard Trent s criticisms and go his own way.

When Duncan returns to the beach house, Pam tells him they are leaving with Trent and Steph. Betty and her kids arrive to say their goodbyes. Susanna finally kisses Duncan. When Trent stops for gas on their way out of town, Duncan jumps out of the station wagon and runs to Water Wizz, followed by his mother, then Trent and Steph. Duncan tells Owen and the other employees that he has to leave and tells Owen to follow him. He takes Owen to the Devil s Peak slide, and Duncan becomes the first person to ever pass someone in the water slide while the rest of the park watches. After finally introducing Owen to his mother, Duncan says goodbye to everyone at the park. Owen tells Pam of Duncan’s good nature, and introduces himself to Trent as a good friend of the three . Trent then attempts to bypass Owen in order to bring Duncan back to the car, but Owen blocks him and Trent retreats. Duncan thanks Owen for everything. Trent, Steph, Pam and Duncan regroup in the car, where Pam finally stands up for herself as they head out of town. Pam climbs to the “way way back” of the car where Duncan is sitting, and they share a smile as Trent s protests are heard in the background.


Cast

  • Liam James as Duncan
  • Steve Carell as Trent Ramsey
  • Toni Collette as Pam
  • Sam Rockwell as Owen
  • Allison Janney as Betty Thompson
  • AnnaSophia Robb as Susanna Thompson
  • Maya Rudolph as Caitlin
  • Rob Corddry as Kip
  • Amanda Peet as Joan
  • Jim Rash as Lewis
  • Nat Faxon as Roddy
  • Robert Capron as Kyle
  • River Alexander as Peter Thompson
  • Ava Deluca-Verley as Katy
  • Zoe Levin as Steph Ramsey
  • Adam Riegler as Neil
  • Jake Picking as Chad

Reception

Box office

The film had its premiere screening at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival. It was one of the most financially successful films to come out of the festival that year, outperforming well-known entries and Oscar-nominated films from the previous year. It was released on July 5, 2013 in 19 theaters and surpassed box office expectations, averaging an impressive $30,263 per screen and grossing $525,000 for the weekend. On July 15, 2013, it was added to an additional 60 theaters and grossed $1,110,000. It ended up earning $21,506,546 in North America and $4,968,374 elsewhere, for a total of $26,474,920.

Critical response

The Way, Way Back received positive reviews. On Rotten Tomatoes it has a rating of 83% based on 185 reviews, with an average score of 7.30/10. The website s critical consensus states, Despite its familiar themes, The Way Way Back makes use of its talented cast, finely tuned script, and an abundance of charm to deliver a funny and satisfying coming-of-age story . On Metacritic the film has a weighted average score of 68 out of 100 based on 41 reviews, indicating generally favorable reviews .

Inkoo Kang of The Village Voice called the film a crowd-pleasing summer treat, predictable in its sweetness but satisfying all the same . BBC Radio 5 Live film critic Mark Kermode praised the performances of Sam Rockwell, Toni Collette, Allison Janney and Maya Rudolph and similarly reasoned that whilst it s not world-changing, or earth-shattering the film is really sweet and funny . David Gritten of The Daily Telegraph also praised the scene-stealing performances of Janney and Rockwell, concluding that despite a flood of similar coming-of-age films released in 2013 the film feels warm, funny—and even fresh . Catherine Shoard of The Guardian gave the film a positive review, concluding that for all the longueurs, there are still enough moments of near brilliance to sustain you through the trip . Betsy Sharkey of the Los Angeles Times commended the film s quirky dialogue and cast performances, calling the film witty, heartwarming, hopeful, sentimental, searing and relatable .

Sam Rockwell s performance was met with critical praise, with many critics agreeing that his performance was deserving of an Academy Award nomination. MaryAnn Johanson of Flick Filosopher said that Rockwell makes the biggest splash with a sizzling supporting performance. Not only is he naturally funny, but he has the great ability to make every sharp line of dialogue sound freshly improvised.

A.A. Dowd of The A.V. Club gave the film a C+, describing it as generically constructed and never as refreshing as it s constantly straining to be .

Accolades

List of Awards and Nominations
AwardCategoryRecipientsResult
AARP Movies for Grownups AwardsBest ComedyThe Way, Way BackWon
Critics Choice Movie AwardsBest ComedyNominated
Best Actor in a ComedySam RockwellNominated
Best Young Actor/ActressLiam JamesNominated
MTV Movie AwardsBest Breakthrough PerformanceLiam JamesNominated
Online Film Critics SocietyBest Supporting ActorSam RockwellNominated
Phoenix Film Critics Society Awards 2013Best Actor in a Supporting RoleSam RockwellNominated
Best Ensemble ActingNominated
Breakthrough Performance on CameraLiam JamesNominated
Best Performance by a Youth in a Lead or Supporting Role – MaleLiam JamesNominated
San Diego Film Critics SocietyBest Supporting ActorSam RockwellNominated
Best Ensemble PerformanceNominated
St. Louis Gateway Film Critics AssociationBest ComedyNominated
Washington D.C. Area Film Critics AssociationBest Acting EnsembleNominated
Best Youth PerformanceLiam JamesNominated
Young Artist AwardsBest Leading Young Actor in a Feature FilmLiam JamesNominated
Best Supporting Young Actor in a Feature FilmRiver AlexanderNominated

Soundtrack

Heather Phares of AllMusic gave the film s soundtrack 7 out of 10 stars, saying:

The charming coming of age comedy The Way Way Back soundtracks its tale of 14-year-old Duncan s fateful summer working at the Water Wizz water park with bouncy 80s hits and indie rock. ... While the collection isn t as consistent as the soundtracks to like-minded films such as Juno or Little Miss Sunshine, it still has enough personality to be an entertaining set of songs.

Other songs

  • Can t Fight This Feeling – REO Speedwagon

Condition

New

Actor

Adam Leipzig, Ahmed Abounouom, Alexander Yves Brunner, Dileep Singh Rathore, Keith R. Clarke, Peter Weir, Slavomir Rawicz

Publisher

Image Entertainment

Published Date

2011

Rating MPA

Pg-13 (Parents Strongly Cautioned)

Recording Length

133

Recording Studio

Image Entertainment

Format

DVD

Brand

Image Entertainment

Age Group

Adult

Amazon ASIN

B004C45AZU

UPC / EAN

014381693829

Year

2013

ReleaseDate

2013-07-26

RuntimeMins

103

RuntimeStr

1h 43min

Awards

Awards, 5 wins & 30 nominations

Directors

Nat Faxon, Jim Rash

Writers

Nat Faxon, Jim Rash

Stars

Steve Carell, Toni Collette, Allison Janney

Produced by

Nat Faxon, Ben Nearn, George Parra, Gigi Pritzker, Jim Rash, Tom Rice, Rebecca Rivo, Kevin J. Walsh

Music by

Rob Simonsen

Cinematography by

John Bailey

Film Editing by

Tatiana S. Riegel

Casting By

Allison Jones

Production Design by

Mark Ricker

Art Direction by

Jeremy Woodward

Set Decoration by

Rena DeAngelo

Costume Design by

Michelle Matland, Ann Roth

Makeup Department

Brooke Baron, Voni Hinkle, Kat Percy, Sherryn Smith, Jeanne Van Phue, Rebecca Woodfork, Raul Hernandez

Production Management

Heidi August, J.M. Logan, James Smith, Colin Walsh

Second Unit Director or Assistant Director

Alyssa Boffoli, Ramses del Hierro, Greta Methot

Art Department

Shadya H. Ballug, David Bennett, Larin Brink, Gary Chandler, Mimi Coleman, Alison-Eve Hammersley, Elizabeth Howland, Ryan Johnson, Jenny E. McCracken, Laura C. McPherson, Janine Moore, Scott T. Pina, Alys Vincent, Shann Whynot-Young, Brian Hakala, John Larson

Sound Department

Robert Althoff, Paul Aronoff, Darren Barnett, Christopher Barrick, Ron Bedrosian, Kyle Billingsley, Patrick Cyccone Jr., Christopher Flowers, Tim Haber, Andrew Garrett Lange, Doug Madick, Nick Neutra, Kevin S. Parker, Perry Robertson, Scott Sanders, Mark Shaw, Arno Stephanian, Noel Vought, Kevin Zimmerman, Christopher Cleator, P.J. Corvus, Tom Ryan, John Soukup, Ceri Thomas, Rabb Whitehead

Special Effects by

Christopher Walsh, Lindsay Boffoli, John Ruggieri

Visual Effects by

Gerard Andal, Kyle Andal, Meg Bailey, Jeremy Brown, Ross Daly, Sean Devereaux, Brian Drewes, Angela Ellis, Jaime Fortuno-Lavin, Robby Geis, Leighana Ginther

Stunts

Paul Marini

Camera and Electrical Department

Robert Bullard, Katherine Castro, Steven Cueva, Kristian Cunningham, Geoff Dann, Joshua Dreyfus, Michael Dynice, Mike Fitzgerald, Claire Folger, David Larue, Gabe Munitz-Alessio, Mark Price, Steve Sherrick, Benjamin Spek, Bill Trautvetter, Christine Willard, Fred Young, Jozo Zovko, David Christopher, Blair Dreyfus, Dan Hutchinson, Mark Killian, Benjamin Tyler Knight, John Larson, Brinton MacFarland, Branden James Maxham, Brandon J. Meadows, Alexander Jay Nelson, Melanie Patten, Harry Pray IV

Casting Department

Matt Bouldry, Billy Dowd, Jennifer Euston, Ben Harris, Michael Iemma, Peter John Kousakis, Emer O Callaghan, Sarah Otteman, Chris Petit, Carolyn Pickman, Patty Connolly, Christina Glickman, Mark Sussman

Costume and Wardrobe Department

Whitney H. Burke, Alyson MacInnis, Margaret Palmer, Jonathan Schwartz, Hanna Shea, Eliza Soros, Taryn Walsh, Jillian Winfield

Editorial Department

Daniel Boccoli, Regan Copeland, Rob Doolittle, Paul Lavoie, Mato, Tim Maxwell, John Nicolard, Bill Schultz, Kostas Theodosiou

Location Management

Ian Larson, Sarahkate Sullivan, Colin Walsh, John Whoriskey Jr., Caitlin Ringness, Eoin Walsh

Music Department

Isaac Carpenter, Linda Cohen, Brett Farkas, Jon Mooney, Kyle Okaly, Jonathan Palmer, Pawel Sek, Rob Simonsen, Erich Stratmann, Christopher Wray

Script and Continuity Department

Kim Berner, Bridget Briley-Snook

Transportation Department

Kent Lanigan, Jim Leone, Joseph Maloney, Bill Manson, Dan McCarthy, Daniel F. Redmond, Stan Sicinski, Michael Simone, Tony Soucier, Harry St. Pierre

Additional Crew

Eric Altieri, Cindy Anderson, Gregory Auerbach, Heidi August, Cassandra Barbour, John Boreland, Stacy Calabrese, Julie Florendo Camesa, Andrew Carter, Allison Clayton, Brian Covalt, Kendall Farley, Elizabeth Fisher, Brittany N. Flynn, Wes Ford, Ian Freedman, Jose Gallardo, Andrew Hillson, Ryan Hussey, Philip Joncas, Tom Just, Steven M. Kalb, Kevin Keene, Colleen Kelly, Noreen Kelly, Katie Kramer, Chelsea Krant, Scott Levine, Matthew Levy, Bill Lischak, Brinton MacFarland, Kyle MacPhee, Jessica Maher, Patrick Mahoney, Yelena Makarczyk, Reinier Martínez, Isaac Mason, Tim Maxwell, Matthew McCoubry, Linda McDonough, Aaron Michiel, Jan Mitchell, Heather Mount, Christopher O Donnell, Caitlin Osgood, Sabrina Parra, Natalya Petrosova, Skoty Rea, Matthew Redmond, Emily Rice, Katie Rice, Kim Rideout, Sky Salem Robinson, Rebecca Sands, John Sansone, Laura Sevier, Chuck Slavin, Adam M. Stone, Cat Stone, James Tevlin, Andy Wells, Zoe Wilschinsky, Steve York, Cameron Arguelles, Alix Bannon, Susan Boyajian, Christina Cook, Tanja Crouch, Frank Durant, Shawn Fogarty, Colleen Kelly, Colleen Kelly, Colleen Kelly, Gregory Seymore, Gunnar Sizemore, Nicholas Ryan Smith, Amanda Sutton, Alex Thiel, Carsen Warner

Thanks

Jennifer Anderson, Tommy Ardolino, Dawn Baillie, Jay Baker, Thomas Bezucha, John Campisi, Jay Chandrasekhar, Andrew Crouch, Brian Dobbins, Anna Feder, Alexis Garcia, Rick Genow, Gail Glaser, Carlos K. Goodman, Adam Harrington, Mark Harrington, Carrie Ann Inaba, Joseph Kelly, Brian Kend, Shawn Levy, Laura Lewis, Jeff Morrone, Jen Roskind, Lorene Scafaria, Gregory Slewett, Shari Smiley, Adam Somner, Ian Stone, Lisa Strout, Phil Tavares, Tate Taylor, Denise Vaccaro, Gino Vaccaro

Genres

Comedy, Drama

Companies

Sycamore Pictures, The Walsh Company, MWM Studios

Countries

USA

Languages

English

ContentRating

PG-13

ImDbRating

7.4

ImDb Rating Votes

150285

Metacritic Rating

68

Short Description

The Way, Way Back is a 2013 American coming-of-age comedy-drama film written and directed by Nat Faxon and Jim Rash in their directorial debuts. It stars Liam James as Duncan, an introverted 14-year-old who goes on summer vacation to Wareham, Massachusetts with his mother and her overbearing boyfriend. It also stars Steve Carell, Toni Collette, Allison Janney, AnnaSophia Robb, Sam Rockwell, and Maya Rudolph, with Rob Corddry, Amanda Peet, Faxon, and Rash in supporting roles.

Faxon and Rash conceived the film in the early 2000s; however, it spent several years in development hell before funding could be secured. Eventually, Fox Searchlight Pictures (the same studio which distributed other independent films such as Little Miss Sunshine and Juno) agreed to distribute the film. Filming lasted several months during summer 2012. It premiered at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival, and had a wider release on July 5, 2013, where it received positive reviews and was a box office success, grossing $26.9 million against its $5 million budget.

Box Office Budget

$5,000,000 (estimated)

Box Office Opening Weekend USA

$552,788

Box Office Gross USA

$21,506,546

Box Office Cumulative Worldwide Gross

$26,474,920

Keywords

Summer,water park,shy kid,unlikely friendship,water slide

Year

2013

ReleaseDate

2013-07-26

RuntimeMins

103

RuntimeStr

1h 43min

Awards

Awards, 5 wins & 30 nominations

Directors

Nat Faxon, Jim Rash

Writers

Nat Faxon, Jim Rash

Stars

Steve Carell, Toni Collette, Allison Janney

Produced by

Nat Faxon, Ben Nearn, George Parra, Gigi Pritzker, Jim Rash, Tom Rice, Rebecca Rivo, Kevin J. Walsh

Music by

Rob Simonsen

Cinematography by

John Bailey

Film Editing by

Tatiana S. Riegel

Casting By

Allison Jones

Production Design by

Mark Ricker

Art Direction by

Jeremy Woodward

Set Decoration by

Rena DeAngelo

Costume Design by

Michelle Matland, Ann Roth

Makeup Department

Brooke Baron, Voni Hinkle, Kat Percy, Sherryn Smith, Jeanne Van Phue, Rebecca Woodfork, Raul Hernandez

Production Management

Heidi August, J.M. Logan, James Smith, Colin Walsh

Second Unit Director or Assistant Director

Alyssa Boffoli, Ramses del Hierro, Greta Methot

Art Department

Shadya H. Ballug, David Bennett, Larin Brink, Gary Chandler, Mimi Coleman, Alison-Eve Hammersley, Elizabeth Howland, Ryan Johnson, Jenny E. McCracken, Laura C. McPherson, Janine Moore, Scott T. Pina, Alys Vincent, Shann Whynot-Young, Brian Hakala, John Larson

Sound Department

Robert Althoff, Paul Aronoff, Darren Barnett, Christopher Barrick, Ron Bedrosian, Kyle Billingsley, Patrick Cyccone Jr., Christopher Flowers, Tim Haber, Andrew Garrett Lange, Doug Madick, Nick Neutra, Kevin S. Parker, Perry Robertson, Scott Sanders, Mark Shaw, Arno Stephanian, Noel Vought, Kevin Zimmerman, Christopher Cleator, P.J. Corvus, Tom Ryan, John Soukup, Ceri Thomas, Rabb Whitehead

Special Effects by

Christopher Walsh, Lindsay Boffoli, John Ruggieri

Visual Effects by

Gerard Andal, Kyle Andal, Meg Bailey, Jeremy Brown, Ross Daly, Sean Devereaux, Brian Drewes, Angela Ellis, Jaime Fortuno-Lavin, Robby Geis, Leighana Ginther

Stunts

Paul Marini

Camera and Electrical Department

Robert Bullard, Katherine Castro, Steven Cueva, Kristian Cunningham, Geoff Dann, Joshua Dreyfus, Michael Dynice, Mike Fitzgerald, Claire Folger, David Larue, Gabe Munitz-Alessio, Mark Price, Steve Sherrick, Benjamin Spek, Bill Trautvetter, Christine Willard, Fred Young, Jozo Zovko, David Christopher, Blair Dreyfus, Dan Hutchinson, Mark Killian, Benjamin Tyler Knight, John Larson, Brinton MacFarland, Branden James Maxham, Brandon J. Meadows, Alexander Jay Nelson, Melanie Patten, Harry Pray IV

Casting Department

Matt Bouldry, Billy Dowd, Jennifer Euston, Ben Harris, Michael Iemma, Peter John Kousakis, Emer O Callaghan, Sarah Otteman, Chris Petit, Carolyn Pickman, Patty Connolly, Christina Glickman, Mark Sussman

Costume and Wardrobe Department

Whitney H. Burke, Alyson MacInnis, Margaret Palmer, Jonathan Schwartz, Hanna Shea, Eliza Soros, Taryn Walsh, Jillian Winfield

Editorial Department

Daniel Boccoli, Regan Copeland, Rob Doolittle, Paul Lavoie, Mato, Tim Maxwell, John Nicolard, Bill Schultz, Kostas Theodosiou

Location Management

Ian Larson, Sarahkate Sullivan, Colin Walsh, John Whoriskey Jr., Caitlin Ringness, Eoin Walsh

Music Department

Isaac Carpenter, Linda Cohen, Brett Farkas, Jon Mooney, Kyle Okaly, Jonathan Palmer, Pawel Sek, Rob Simonsen, Erich Stratmann, Christopher Wray

Script and Continuity Department

Kim Berner, Bridget Briley-Snook

Transportation Department

Kent Lanigan, Jim Leone, Joseph Maloney, Bill Manson, Dan McCarthy, Daniel F. Redmond, Stan Sicinski, Michael Simone, Tony Soucier, Harry St. Pierre

Additional Crew

Eric Altieri, Cindy Anderson, Gregory Auerbach, Heidi August, Cassandra Barbour, John Boreland, Stacy Calabrese, Julie Florendo Camesa, Andrew Carter, Allison Clayton, Brian Covalt, Kendall Farley, Elizabeth Fisher, Brittany N. Flynn, Wes Ford, Ian Freedman, Jose Gallardo, Andrew Hillson, Ryan Hussey, Philip Joncas, Tom Just, Steven M. Kalb, Kevin Keene, Colleen Kelly, Noreen Kelly, Katie Kramer, Chelsea Krant, Scott Levine, Matthew Levy, Bill Lischak, Brinton MacFarland, Kyle MacPhee, Jessica Maher, Patrick Mahoney, Yelena Makarczyk, Reinier Martínez, Isaac Mason, Tim Maxwell, Matthew McCoubry, Linda McDonough, Aaron Michiel, Jan Mitchell, Heather Mount, Christopher O Donnell, Caitlin Osgood, Sabrina Parra, Natalya Petrosova, Skoty Rea, Matthew Redmond, Emily Rice, Katie Rice, Kim Rideout, Sky Salem Robinson, Rebecca Sands, John Sansone, Laura Sevier, Chuck Slavin, Adam M. Stone, Cat Stone, James Tevlin, Andy Wells, Zoe Wilschinsky, Steve York, Cameron Arguelles, Alix Bannon, Susan Boyajian, Christina Cook, Tanja Crouch, Frank Durant, Shawn Fogarty, Colleen Kelly, Colleen Kelly, Colleen Kelly, Gregory Seymore, Gunnar Sizemore, Nicholas Ryan Smith, Amanda Sutton, Alex Thiel, Carsen Warner

Thanks

Jennifer Anderson, Tommy Ardolino, Dawn Baillie, Jay Baker, Thomas Bezucha, John Campisi, Jay Chandrasekhar, Andrew Crouch, Brian Dobbins, Anna Feder, Alexis Garcia, Rick Genow, Gail Glaser, Carlos K. Goodman, Adam Harrington, Mark Harrington, Carrie Ann Inaba, Joseph Kelly, Brian Kend, Shawn Levy, Laura Lewis, Jeff Morrone, Jen Roskind, Lorene Scafaria, Gregory Slewett, Shari Smiley, Adam Somner, Ian Stone, Lisa Strout, Phil Tavares, Tate Taylor, Denise Vaccaro, Gino Vaccaro

Genres

Comedy, Drama

Companies

Sycamore Pictures, The Walsh Company, MWM Studios

Countries

USA

Languages

English

ContentRating

PG-13

ImDbRating

7.4

ImDb Rating Votes

150285

Metacritic Rating

68

Short Description

The Way, Way Back is a 2013 American coming-of-age comedy-drama film written and directed by Nat Faxon and Jim Rash in their directorial debuts. It stars Liam James as Duncan, an introverted 14-year-old who goes on summer vacation to Wareham, Massachusetts with his mother and her overbearing boyfriend. It also stars Steve Carell, Toni Collette, Allison Janney, AnnaSophia Robb, Sam Rockwell, and Maya Rudolph, with Rob Corddry, Amanda Peet, Faxon, and Rash in supporting roles.

Faxon and Rash conceived the film in the early 2000s; however, it spent several years in development hell before funding could be secured. Eventually, Fox Searchlight Pictures (the same studio which distributed other independent films such as Little Miss Sunshine and Juno) agreed to distribute the film. Filming lasted several months during summer 2012. It premiered at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival, and had a wider release on July 5, 2013, where it received positive reviews and was a box office success, grossing $26.9 million against its $5 million budget.

Box Office Budget

$5,000,000 (estimated)

Box Office Opening Weekend USA

$552,788

Box Office Gross USA

$21,506,546

Box Office Cumulative Worldwide Gross

$26,474,920

Keywords

Summer,water park,shy kid,unlikely friendship,water slide