“The Age of Adaline” Flexed Muscles Amid Top Performing Action Movies @ The Box-Office
Female-skewed
romantic movie “The Age of Adaline” starring Blake Lively made history on its
opening day when it pulled in $4.9 and emerged number one at the box-office
against “Furious 7’s” three-week reign.
Likewise Lively’s ageless starrer managed to muscle its way at number two
spot on its second weekend in cinemas which is again ahead of “Furious 7” and
behind “Avengers: Age of Ultron” at the
domestic (U.S.) box-office.
Holding on to forever in “The
Age of Adaline” is what Blake Lively’s titular character is facing in the
movie. Born near the turn of the 20th
century, Adaline Bowman never dreamed she would live to see the beginning of
the 21st, until one seemingly magical moment saves her from death and grants
her eternal youth. At the age of 29, Adaline stops aging and experiences life
as no human being has before.
This remarkable twist of fate
sets her on an unparalleled journey that spans for decades. She has experienced
life and love through global transformations of two World Wars and the
freewheeling 1960s to the conveniences of present day. Carefully concealing her
secret from everyone but her aging daughter, Adaline manages momentous changes
with grace, until a past relationship collides with a modern-day chance for
love and threatens to expose her extraordinary history.
The producers believe that the
meticulous preparation, epic yet intimate scope and impressive performances
make The Age of Adaline a movie like no other. “I think that we are in a time
in film where originality counts,” says producer Gary Lucchesi. “I don’t think
anyone is going to come to our film and say, well, I’ve seen this before.
Audiences are hungry for good stories, especially if they pack the kinds of
surprises this does. Our director has a unique point of view and he’s created a
visually stunning movie. Blake Lively gives the performance of her lifetime. I
hope audiences watch this movie and, say, ‘God, that’s a really good movie.’”
A large part of the film’s unique point of
view is in its nuanced portrayal of love in all its forms, says Lively.
"There are different kinds of love stories within the movie," she
continues. "There's the modern and apparent male-female story. There's a
more complex love story that rests in Adaline's past and is brought to life
again in her present. There's also a deeply touching story of love between mother
and daughter. Adaline's life of love is such a beautiful journey."
Although the film visits many
time periods, the story is squarely focused in the present. “It’s not a
procedural where in the ’20s, this happened and in the ’30s that happened and
so on,” says Lucchesi. “It’s a big-idea movie about what it might feel like not
to age. Adaline is at an ideal age for her entire life. You would think that
that would be the greatest thing in the world—to look the best you will ever
look, to be intelligent and fully formed and never age a day. But as Adaline
sees her own child mature and grow older, she begins to wish she could have
taken that journey as well.”
Lively says the film is unlike
any she's ever seen in its exploration of that idea. "It's about love and
loss and what they mean if you were able to live forever," adds Lively.
"Is that a gift or is it a curse? I walked away from Adaline's story
thinking that life happens exactly the way it's supposed to. To live life
surrounded by the people you love, to come and go with them, that feels like
the perfect order to me."
“The Age of Adaline” opens May
20 in cinemas nationwide from Pioneer Films.
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