Avalon
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Barry Levinson
Rachel Aviva
Christine Mosere
Frank Tamburo
Christopher James Lekas
Barbara Morris
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
This prequel to Levinson's autobiographical "Diner" and "Tin Men" traces his family's roots and their Russian Jewish heritage. The film focuses on four brothers, and their assimilation into American society.
Director
Barry Levinson
Cast
Rachel Aviva
Christine Mosere
Frank Tamburo
Christopher James Lekas
Barbara Morris
Michael Krauss
David Thornhill
Ric Mcelvin
Kevin Blum
Samantha Shenk
Jesse Adelman
Tom Wood
Joan Plowright
Ralph Tabakin
James A Zemarel
Brian Shait
Frania Rubinek
David Long
Patrick Flynn
Steve Aronson
Anna Bergman
Aidan Quinn
Israel Rubinek
Bernard Hiller
Irv Stein
Patty Sherman
Elizabeth Perkins
Mina Bern
Ronald Guttman
Brenda Alford
Moishe Rosenfeld
Thomas Joy
Robert Zalkind
Eva Eileen Quinn
Eva Cohen
Alisa Bernstein
Lou Jacobi
Mary Lechter
Dawne Hindle
Neil Kirk
Sylvia Weinberg
Tammy Walker
Herb Levinson
Armin Mueller-stahl
Shifra Lerer
Miles A Perman
Leo Fuchs
Kevin Pollak
Michael David Edelstein
Beatrice Yoffe
Alvin Myerovich
Jordan Young
Elijah Wood
Eve Gordon
Grant Gelt
Josh Lessner
Judy Bach
Thelma Weiner
Mindy Loren Isenstein
Paul Quinn
Crew
C J Appel
Ted Bafaloukos
Craig Barrow
Richard Beggs
Richard Beggs
Dwight Benjamin-creel
Thomas Bookout
Gloria S Borders
Ralph Brandofino
Irving Buchman
Thomas R Burman
Willie Burton
Norm Carpenter
John C Casey
Brian Chavanne
Ellen Chenoweth
Wade Childress
Stephanie Claxton
Allegra Clegg
Freddie Cooper
Tom Costich
Mark Cotone
Blair Daily
Allen Daviau
Sandy De Crescent
Linda Descenna
Louis Digiaimo
Debra Donaldson
Bari Dreiband-burman
Jennifer Erskine
Christopher Evans
Jim Flamberg
Brian Flora
Clare Freeman
Harold Fuhrman
Sara Gardner-gail
Paul Gebbia
Gary Gegan
Michael Gignarale
Katie Gilbert
Nancy Gilmore
Peter Giuliano
Romaine Greene
Gloria Gresham
Oda Groeschel
Tony Guastella
Allen L Hall
Greg A Hall
Winter Hall
Jack Hayes
Gary Hecker
Bob L Hendrix
Fred Hole
Tim Holland
Mark Johnson
Michael Kenner
Bill Kohout
Joel Kramer
Christine Larson-nitzsche
Barry Levinson
Barry Levinson
Marvin E. Lewis
Stu Linder
Michael J Malone
Bobby Mancuso
Ruby Manis
Gregg Mason
Bill Mather
Bill Mayberry
Nancy Mcardle
Barbara Mcbane
Rich Mckay
Jonathan Mckinstry
Ray Mercer
Robert W Meyers
Pat Moran
Julie Mossberg
Jennifer Neiman
Charles J. Newirth
Charles J. Newirth
Reggie Newkirk
Deborah Newman
Randy Newman
Peter Norman
Phillip B Olbrantz
Hope M. Parrish
Tony Piller
Clay Pinney
Julie Pitkanen
John Rankin
Robert Raring
Mike Revell
Norman Reynolds
Edward T. Richardson
Catherine Rowe
Marie Rowe
John Rusk
Jill Greenberg Sands
G Tony Scarano
Charles J.d. Schlissel
Jim Shelton
Robert Shoup
Victoria J Snow
Jim Solomon
Gary Summers
Ewa Sztompke
Ethan Van Der Ryn
Larry Wallace
Marian Wallace
Barry Wetcher
Marian Wilde
Foard Wilgis
Eddie Wirth
Frank Wolf
Steve Wright
Videos
Movie Clip
Film Details
Technical Specs
Award Nominations
Best Cinematography
Best Costume Design
Best Original Screenplay
Best Score
Articles
Avalon
Diner was the trigger--a pitch-perfect recreation of the 1959, stuck-in-a-groove lifestyle of six Baltimore guys in their 20s, swapping yucks at the all-night eatery over gravied french fries like they have since they were kids, and not being much more savvy than that about adulthood or women. The around-the-table pop-culture banter was hilarious and convincing, and unprecedented in that it structured the film, and revealed these men to us while they talked about anything but themselves. (This was a significance not lost on a young fanboy named Quentin Tarantino.) Still occupying the transitional period of late-'50s-early-'60s, Tin Men moved into the ratpit world of pennyante middle-aged sales culture, and Liberty Heights steps back, into the awkward teenage Levinson's shoes for a coming-of-age struggle during the first stirrings of the Civil Rights era.
Avalon strides back further, into the late '40s, when the Barry avatar Michael (Elijah Wood) is all of nine and the youngest scion of the Krichinsky clan, led by four aging Polish Jew immigrant brothers who've already built and lost a department store business. We focus on one tale-spinning patriarch, Sam (Armin Mueller-Stahl), the testy mamele at his side (Joan Plowright), their grown son Jules (Aidan Quinn) and his wife Ann (Elizabeth Perkins) and Michael's parents, as the collected Krichinskys (Levinson's mother's maiden name, incidentally) gather for Thanksgiving, converge on annual family meetings, and generally negotiate America, which means starting new businesses, buying the family's first TV (staring at the test pattern, the kids whisper, "Seems like something's about to happen."), moving to the suburbs, and watching the once-ironclad family slowly swap one dominant generation for another and drift apart.
It's a gentle, meandering movie, suffused with affection and patience--the same affection and patience we felt listening to the boys talk trash late at night in Diner, and the same we harbor ourselves at our lives' ruminative moments, looking at the arc of our families. The screenplay isn't made up of events, really, but decisions, reactions and observations. Nothing in Avalon ever feels arbitrary or emphatic; the scenes don't make plot points, they're just lived by the characters, with a natural gravity and grace. Mueller-Stahl's lordy grandfather is a natural performer, and so the actor makes him large, but otherwise you hardly ever catch the actors "acting" - it's just behavior. Watch them listen to each other - the space between characters is denser with feeling than most whole movies. Levinson knows how to orchestrate busy, fifteen-points-of-view dialogue scenes, around meals or merely in cramped domestic spaces, like nobody else in Hollywood, but the particulars are also sublime. A lengthy scene centered on Perkins's young wife complaining in bed to Quinn's affable Everyguy about her maddening mother-in-law could be a cliche, but the camera stays back, the actors keep their voices down so as not to be heard, and the back-and-forth kvetch-fest sounds so true and so respectful of the characters' intelligence that it has the feel of something lived, not something contrived in Hollywood. This is what you get when a film is invested with personal memory and feeling, not market-tested greed.
As it is, the people populating the fringes of the movie are indelible, and often are Baltimore citizens enlisted for their realness: Sylvia Weinberg, as Michael's stern elementary school teacher, is unmistakably the genuine article, and Avalon is in fact her only credit; Ralph Tabakin, as the crotchety school principal, is a Baltimore resident whose filmography is comprised only of every one of Levinson's films. Avalon is perhaps best appreciated as an deft fusion of details, some poetic and many mesmerizingly authentic: the school boys playing around on a discarded upright piano in the rain; the scurry of the family into the living room, carrying their dinner plates, at the start of The Texaco Star Theatre with Milton Berle; the circus elephants magically appearing down the center of the suburban street; Michael observing, out the car's rear window after a family fight, a work crew crane-lowering a prefab diner onto a street-corner; and so on. Even the textures of car grills and console-radio tuning dials bewitch Levinson.
Somehow, the filmmaker infuses Avalon with a nostalgic passion that never feels forced or coy or treacly. Sometimes Levinson moves too quickly past his beautiful moments, but the aggregate remains lovely and moving in a way Hollywood movies aren't allowed to be any longer. Since Liberty Heights, even Levinson can't raise the funds to go back to Baltimore, even though it's clear that's all he should've been doing all these years.
By Michael Atkinson
Avalon
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Barry Levinson was nominated for the Directors Guild of America's 1990 Outstanding Directorial Achievement Award.
Released in United States Fall October 5, 1990
Released in United States January 1991
Released in United States October 19, 1990
Released in United States on Video May 10, 1991
Shown at Brussels International Film Festival January 9-19, 1991.
Began shooting September 6, 1989.
Completed shooting November 22, 1989.
Released in United States January 1991 (Shown at Brussels International Film Festival January 9-19, 1991.)
Released in United States on Video May 10, 1991
Released in United States Fall October 5, 1990
Released in United States October 19, 1990