Rocket Science | |
---|---|
Directed by | Jeffrey Blitz |
Written by | Jeffrey Blitz |
Produced by | Effie T. Brown Sean Welch |
Starring | Reece Thompson Anna Kendrick Nicholas D'Agosto Vincent Piazza Aaron Yoo |
Narrated by | Dan Cashman |
Cinematography | Jo Willems |
Edited by | Yana Gorskaya |
Music by | Eef Barzelay |
Production companies | Duly Noted, Inc. B&W Films |
Distributed by | HBO Films Picturehouse |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 101 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $4.5 million[1] |
Box office | $755,774[2] |
Rocket Science is a 2007 American comedy-drama film written and directed by Jeffrey Blitz, and starring Reece Thompson, Anna Kendrick, Nicholas D'Agosto, Vincent Piazza, and Aaron Yoo. It tells the story of Hal Hefner, a fifteen-year-old stutterer who decides to join his school's debate team when he develops a crush on its star member, and addresses the themes of coming of age, sexuality, and finding one's voice.
Blitz conceived a rough storyline for the film while making Spellbound, a documentary about 1999's Scripps National Spelling Bee, but an HBO Films executive persuaded him to write the film based on his own adolescence when he told her about his experiences as a stutterer. The film's producers visited several cities in the United States and Canada; Thompson was cast based on a tape which his agent had sent and a follow-up audition after the first actor cast in the lead was forced to pull out. The film was shot over 30 days in Baltimore, Maryland and Trenton, New Jersey.
Rocket Science premiered on January 19, 2007 at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival and was theatrically released on August 10. It was not a financial success, earning only US$756,000 from its $4.5 million budget, though it was well-received by critics. Reviewers praised Thompson, Kendrick and D'Agosto's performances and the film's parallels to real life; others believed that the film was deliberately quirky and forgettable. It was nominated for Sundance's Dramatic Grand Jury Prize and three Independent Spirit Awards. Though it failed to win any of the Grand Jury Prizes at Sundance, Blitz won its Dramatic Directing Award.