Michael Douglas gives a bravura performance in writer-director Mike Cahill's feature-length debut, KING OF CALIFORNIA. Douglas stars as Charlie, a troubled musician who has just been released from a mental hospital. He returns home to live with his 16-year-old daughter, Miranda (Evan Rachel Wood), who is not exactly thrilled to have him back.
Reviews:
Michael Douglas gives a bravura performance in writer-director Mike
Cahill's feature-length debut, KING OF CALIFORNIA. Douglas stars as
Charlie, a troubled musician who has just been released from a mental
hospital. He returns home to live with his 16-year-old daughter,
Miranda (Evan Rachel Wood), who is not exactly thrilled to have him
back. Miranda has been forced to quit school and get a job in order to
support herself and hold on to her beat-up old car and the family
house, which is right in the middle of a new development--but she has
refused to sell out. Instead, she works extra shifts at McDonald's and
has no social life. But her father--still suffering from mental
illness--insists that she join him on a wild adventure in search of
supposedly long-buried treasure, and soon the two of them are combing
through California, facing danger as Charlie leads them on a crazy
quest that takes them through major chain stores and restaurants. Wood
(THIRTEEN) is excellent as Miranda, walking that fine line between
wanting to believe in her father and feeling he should be hospitalized
again--but she never stops loving him, even against her better
judgment. Bushy-haired and wild-eyed, Douglas shines every second he's
onscreen, dreaming the impossible dream. The outstanding soundtrack
features songs by John Coltrane, Seals and Crofts, Bud Powell, Fats
Waller, Yma Sumac, and Billy Bragg and Wilco.