Doing Time on Maple Drive

Doing Time on Maple Drive is a 1992 American made-for-television drama film written by James Duff and directed by Ken Olin. The movie stars James Sikking, Bibi Besch, William McNamara, Jayne Brook, David Byron, Lori Loughlin and Jim Carrey. It premiered on March 16, 1992 on Fox, and was nominated for a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Television Movie. The tagline promoting the film was "They are living a lie called the Perfect American Family". It was shot entirely in Los Angeles.

Doing Time on Maple Drive
DVD cover
Written byJames Duff
Directed byKen Olin
Starring
Theme music composerLaura Karpman
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
Production
Producers
  • Wayne Hanks
  • Paul Lussier
  • Gina Scheerer
CinematographyBing Sokolsky
EditorElba Sanchez-Short
Running time92 minutes
Production companyFNM Films
Original release
NetworkFox
ReleaseMarch 16, 1992 (1992-03-16)

Plot

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The movie centers on the upper middle class Carter family. Phil (Sikking), the patriarch, is a successful local restaurateur, who has been married for many years to Lisa (Besch). They have three grown children, Karen (Brook), Tim (Carrey), and Matt (McNamara). Karen is married to Tom (Byron), an art photographer. Tim works in Phil's restaurant. Matt is a recently engaged college student. Despite outward appearances, the family is quite dysfunctional. Tim is an alcoholic who failed out of college. He catches Phil bribing local officials to overlook problems with the restaurant and tells his father that he resents him for acting like his drinking makes him a criminal when Phil is committing his own misdeeds. Tom thinks his in-laws dislike him because they believe that he destroyed Karen's literary career. Phil tells Tom that he and Karen are not financially stable enough to have children yet. Lisa is in deep denial about her family's problems.

Matt brings his fiancée, Allison (Loughlin), home from college one weekend to meet his family. While there, she witnesses some of their problems. She also discovers that Matt is gay after finding a letter in his jacket from his ex-boyfriend, Kyle. Early the next morning, she gives Matt the letter, breaks the engagement, and leaves after saying that she won't reveal his secret. Matt invents an excuse to explain her departure and doesn't say anything about the wedding. He carries on as if still engaged and attends his bachelor party, where Tim gets drunk and makes a fool of himself. While driving home, Matt decides to commit suicide by driving into a utility pole. He survives and wakes up in the hospital with a broken arm and some scratches. Karen is in the room watching over him and tells him that they haven't been able to reach Allison. He informs Karen that the marriage is off but doesn't state why. They joke about how upsetting the news will be to their parents and she promises not to tell them.

Matt is released from the hospital. The car crash is declared an accident. One day, he comes home with Phil and his siblings to find Lisa sitting on the couch and crying due to reading a note from Allison in which she apologizes for ending the engagement. Lisa demands an explanation. Matt yells at her that she already knows it is because of his sexuality as she walked in on him and Kyle two years earlier and that he deliberately drove into the utility pole because he didn't want to live like this any longer. She tells him to call Allison to reconcile and he shouts at her again before storming off.

Tom angrily confronts Phil and declares that while Phil may be willing to destroy his own family, he won't allow Phil to wreck his. Phil is confused as to what Tom means. Tom then reveals that Karen is pregnant and is so terrified of bringing a child into a family situation like hers that she is considering having an abortion without telling him. Tom implores Karen not to have the abortion and they move away to protect their baby from her family's problems. While Lisa continues to struggle with denial, Phil begins to take tentative steps toward understanding and building bridges with his family.

Cast

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Production notes

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In an interview with Gay Star News, writer James Duff said the network didn't want Jim Carrey cast because he wasn't the "right guy", because of being a comedian. But after seeing his audition, Duff stated "he was amazing...his claim to fame is his comedy genius. I’m not sure people know that he’s got these sort of dramatic chops. He did an amazing job."[1] Duff says of William McNamara, "I wanted somebody who was both extraordinary and ordinary at the same time, who could play ordinary and extraordinary and look extraordinary and ordinary, and he was a very hot commodity at the time."[1]

Duff, who is openly gay, said the movie was "a very personal story and I was trying very hard to make it a universal story, not just about the nature of coming out. It is about denial in our culture and how denial keeps us from dealing with human truths – with our humanity. Everyone on Maple Drive is dealing with denial in some way." He also noted that movies with gay characters at that time were, "few and far between on television and mostly had to do with tragedy that we skirted in Maple Drive. We ended up someplace very good."[1]

Critical reception

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Entertainment Weekly said the movie "does its best to draw you in with simple realism, which allows for complication, ambivalence, and other good things...but some of Maple Drive is a bit too psychologically pat, and its tender ending rings false." They graded the movie A−.[2] The Deseret News review said "The acting is superb. Carrey and Laughlin are revelations, breaking out of the comedy molds they fill in weekly series....and much of the credit for the success of "Maple Drive" goes to director Ken Olin...who opts for several intriguing camera angles and unusual set-ups, which are used to good effect."[3]

The Hartford Courant said the film "ends on a less than tidy note with problems left unsolved and important relationships hanging in the balance -- just like real life. Or just like the beginning of a new series. Either way. It works."[4] Tampa Bay Times praised the movie as being "visually exciting", the dialogue realistic and "the acting natural".[5]

Historian Stephen Tropiano wrote in his book that for the first 85 minutes of the movie Phil is an "oppressive monster, so it's difficult to accept his transformation into a somewhat rational, calming force in the last ten minutes." Additionally, he said that although the film ends "on a quiet, hopeful note, after 95 minutes of sturm and drang, it's all tied up a little too neatly and far too quickly."[6]

Awards and nominations

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Home media

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Doing Time on Maple Drive was released on Region 1 DVD on September 7, 2004.[9]

References

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  1. ^ a b c Hernandez, Greg (June 29, 2017). "Interview: Doing Time on Maple Drive writer reflects on film's 25th anniversary". Gay Star News. Archived from the original on May 3, 2021. Retrieved May 3, 2021.
  2. ^ Tucker, Ken (March 13, 1992). "Doing Time on Maple Drive". Entertainment Weekly.
  3. ^ Pierce, Scott D. (March 16, 1992). "Doing Time On Maple Drive Paints Portrait of a Disintegrating Family". Deseret News.
  4. ^ Endrst, James (March 13, 1992). "Doing Time Exposes Reality of Perfect Family". Hartford Courant.
  5. ^ Froelich, Janis D. (October 10, 2005). "The idealized family gets real". Tampa Bay Times.
  6. ^ Tropiano, Stephen (2002). The Prime Time Closet: A History of Gays and Lesbians on TV. New York: Applause Theatre & Cinema Books. pp. 167–168. ISBN 1-55783-557-8. LCCN 2002003220. OCLC 606827696.
  7. ^ a b c "Doing Time on Maple Drive". Television Academy.
  8. ^ "Television Hall of Fame: Productions". Online Film & Television Association.
  9. ^ Doing Time on Maple Drive. 2004. OCLC 56999410 – via WorldCat.
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