Garden State (2004)
TOMATOMETER
AUDIENCE SCORE
Critic Consensus: Delivering a quirky spin on familiar twentysomething tropes -- with a cannily-placed soundtrack -- Garden State has enough charm to mark a winning debut for first-time director Zach Braff.
Garden State Videos & Photos
Movie Info
Andrew Largeman shuffled through life in a lithium-induced coma until his mother's death inspired a vacation from the pills to see what might happen. A moderately successful TV actor living in Los Angeles, "Large" hasn't been home to the "Garden State" in nine years. But even with 3,000 miles between them, he's been unable to escape his domineering father Gideon and the silencing effect he's had on his son from afar. Stunned to find himself in his hometown after such a long absence, Large finds… More
Rating: | R (for language, drug use and a scene of sexuality) |
Genre: | Drama, Romance, Comedy |
Directed By: | Ian Holm, Jean Smart, Kenneth Graymez, Natalie Portman, Peter Sarsgaard, Ron Leibman, Zach Braff |
Written By: | Zach Braff |
In Theaters: | Jul 28, 2004 Wide |
On DVD: | Dec 28, 2004 |
Box Office: | $26.7M |
Runtime: |
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Cast

as Andrew `Large' Large...

as Sam

as Mark

as Dr. Gideon Largeman

as Jesse

as Dr. Cohen

as Carol

as Diego

as Albert

as Faye

as Dave

as Olivia

as Aunt Syliva Largeman

as Kenny

as Dana

as Kelly

as Tim

as Mrs. Lubin

as Titembay

as Pam

as Karl Benson

as Handi-World Cashier

as Busboy

as Restaurant Manager

as Waiter

as Young Hollywood Guy

as Obnoxious Girl

as Gleason Party Drunk

as Neurology Receptioni...

as Teen in Hallway

as Man Having Sex

as Hooker

as Peeping Tom
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LoginCritic Reviews for Garden State
All Critics (187) | Top Critics (40) | Fresh (161) | Rotten (26) | DVD (35)
Feels too piecemeal and ultimately inconsequential to grab the public where it counts.

This is a movie where 'sensitivity' and 'sincerity' are signposted by songs by Paul Simon and Nick Drake, which I guess says it all.

Although flawed, Garden State is a good-natured film whose very likeability leaves you willing to overlook its shortcomings.

Smart drama for mature older teens and up.

It's no longer a generational alarm clock, but for those who've seen loved ones stumble through complacent fogs of Paxil, Zoloft and the like, "Garden State" still warns that "stability" doesn't mean a numbness to anything not emotionally even-keeled.

There is not a shot in this movie that doesn't shine...

Audience Reviews for Garden State
Touching and charming, Garden States features great performances (especially from Natalie Portman) and an interesting premise. It also contains some memorable scenes that are expertly crafted and at times smartly hilarious.
Super Reviewer
A small-time actor (Zach Braff), doped up on heroic doses of antidepressants, returns home to New Jersey for his mother's funeral and finds love with a quirky lady (Natalie Portman) while working through his family issues. The first half hour is an excellent, deadpan comedy of alienation that feels like a 21st century riff on THE GRADUATE; momentum slowly fades away as the script yields originality to the conventions of the romantic comedy genre.

Super Reviewer
The directorial debut of sitcom actor Zach Braff, many were impressed and surprised by the serious depth and eccentric writing in the script. Also starring in the titular role of Andrew Largeman, Braff is mirroring his own life story and the reaches of his own depression at the time he wrote the script. Now an indie darling and cult classic, the film certainly resonates because of its following of a family's turmoil, but more importantly the role of the deadened senses of the young, and how a person in a quagmire really needs to grab at life for the good. The film centers on child actor turned waiter Andrew, who comes back to his home state of New Jersey for the funeral of his father. He runs into his friends from high school, meets a doctor's receptionist who is a pathological liar and a loveable girl next door, and tries to understand the procession of his life without mood altering drugs or the guilt over his mother's injury. Most of the film is about a love story between down and out Andrew and epileptic Sam, who is making her way through life while keeping her disability a secret and trying to connect to someone besides her loving and yet embarrassing mother. Full of really great and odd performances, it contains many great actors who usually take on smaller and yet substantial roles such as Peter Sarsgaard as a grave digging kleptomaniac, Ian Holm as Andrew's psychiatrist father, who had put his son into a lithium infused haze, and strangely enough a cameo from rapper Method Man as a bellhop. Sincerely, Braff has created a very youth centered and dramatized film, including a Grammy winning soundtrack put together by Braff himself, and an ending that is understandably clichéd and yet satisfying.
Super Reviewer
Garden State Quotes
Andrew Largeman: | There's a handful of normal kid things I kinda missed. |
Samantha: | There's a handful of normal kid things I kinda wish I'd missed. |
Mark: | The only thing worse than a favor is a favor involving money. |
Andrew Largeman: | Are you doing anything right now? |
Samantha: | Can you elaborate on doing anything? |
Andrew Largeman: | I just know this guy Jesse who bought this mansion that's right up here and we wants me to come visit him, but I don't want to stay very long. So I was thinking if you came too I could just say I have to take you home when I'm ready to go. |
Samantha: | Wow. That's pretty damn random of you, Andrew. Nice to meet you. Can I use you? |
Andrew Largeman: | No. |
Samantha: | Must be the Hollywood in you, I guess. |
Andrew Largeman: | No, come on, it's not like that. It will be fun. I'll tell you what, we could have a signal. Like when you pull on your ear that's the code and then I'll be like, oh I gotta take her home. And then we'll go. |
Samantha: | Can we have code names, too? |
Andrew Largeman: | If you want. |
Samantha: | Okay. But don't try and kidnap me or anything because my step-uncle is a bounty hunter and he could have you tracked and killed. |
Andrew Largeman: | You're such a liar! |
Andrew Largeman: | So why were you really there? |
Samantha: | Charging, I'm a robot. |
Andrew Largeman: | Do you lie a lot? |
Samantha: | What do you consider a lot? |
Andrew Largeman: | Enough for people to call you a liar. |
Samantha: | People call me lots of things. |
Andrew Largeman: | Is one of them liar? |
Samantha: | I could say no, but how would you know I'm not lying? |
Andrew Largeman: | I guess I could choose to trust you. |
Samantha: | You can do that? |
Andrew Largeman: | I can try. |
Samantha: | Whose bike is that? |
Andrew Largeman: | It 'was' my grandfather's it was the only thing he left to anybody in the world and he left it to me. And I like it. |
Samantha: | So this is the point in the conversation where you'd ask me if I like a ride home. |
Andrew Largeman: | It is? |
Samantha: | Yep |
Andrew Largeman: | Would you like a ride home? |
Samantha: | Fine but I'm not getting in that side car. |
Andrew Largeman: | Why not? |
Samantha: | Side cars are for bitches anyone who rides in that is automatically your bitch! Thus I will ride on the back. Whoa! |
Andrew Largeman: | Hold on. |
Samantha: | Okay holding my hair's blowing in the wind! |
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