Like Dandelion Dust
Encyclopedia
Like Dandelion Dust is a 2009 drama film
Drama film
A drama film is a film genre that depends mostly on in-depth development of realistic characters dealing with emotional themes. Dramatic themes such as alcoholism, drug addiction, infidelity, moral dilemmas, racial prejudice, religious intolerance, poverty, class divisions, violence against women...

 based on the novel by the same name by Karen Kingsbury
Karen kingsbury
Karen Kingsbury is an American Christian novelist. Her first novel was Missy's Murder. She got this idea from an optional topic in the Los Angeles Times....

. The film won 26 awards at 23 film festivals.

Plot

Two police officers knock on the door of a home and a drunk man answers. This man is Rip Porter, and he lives at the house with his wife Wendy Porter. The police say they are checking in on a domestic disturbance, and when they walk upstairs, they find Wendy injured by Rip's hand. They then arrest Rip, and he spends the next seven years in prison. It is unknown that if domestic assault was Rip's only crime, but he is an alcoholic and may have had a prior criminal record.

Seven years later, Rip is released from prison and Wendy picks him up to take him home. Rip has changed in prison, he is now sober and has taken anger management courses. Not long after returning home, Rip talks to Wendy about starting a family. Wendy has kept a secret from Rip since he went to prison, and tells Rip of this secret; that she gave birth to a son after Rip went to prison, and Rip is the father. She tells him that she gave the baby up for adoption, and the couple who adopted him are the Campbells who live in Florida. Rip is immediately driven to regain custody of his son, and has a right to do so because he never signed the adoption papers. Jack and Molly Campbell enjoyed an idyllic life with Wendy and Rip's son, Joey, and love him very much. One phone call shatters their world when they learn that Rip Porter has just been released from prison and discovered a loophole in the adoption papers and now lays claim to his son. When a judge upholds Rip and Wendy's claim and Molly and Jack learn they must give Joey over to them, they are distraught at the fact that they can no longer keep the son they have raised.

At first, Jack Campbell tries every legal avenue he can find. He speaks with a lawyer about the possibilities of keeping Joey, but his lawyer tells him that there is nothing he can do. Jack then contacts a congressman friend of his, but the congressman also tells him that his hands are tied and there is nothing he can do to help them. As a last resort, Jack travels to Ohio and tries to offer Rip money in exchange for Rip legally signing Joey over permanently to Jack and Molly. Rip refuses, and gets in a physical altercation with Jack. There are no charges pressed against Rip because Jack would also go to jail for violating the court order and for trying to bribe Rip. Jack and Molly have no choice but to allow Joey to visit his biological parents, Wendy and Rip Porter.

Joey's first visit with Wendy and Rip goes exceptionally well. Rip has been working hard on preparing his home for Joey, and when Joey arrives, they work on building a tree house together. Wendy and Rip are grateful to have an opportunity to spend time with their son, and when Joey returns home to Jack and Molly, he excitedly tells them of his trip.

However, Joey's second trip to Rip and Wendy's does not go well. After Rip's confrontation with Jack, he started drinking again, most likely due to the stress of the situation, he could no longer control his repressed alcoholism. Whenever Rip instructs Joey to go to the bathroom and take a shower, Joey refuses. Rip is at first patient, but Joey's constant refusal to wash up eventually causes Rip to lose his temper. He takes Joey to the bathroom forcibly, and while not intentionally doing so, he accidentally puts a bruise on Joey's arm.

Before Joey leaves for Florida, Wendy tells him about making a wish by blowing on a dandelion, and Joey does so. After he leaves, Wendy tells Rip that she arranged to have Joey spend an extra week with Jack and Molly before he permanently returns to them. This upsets Rip, and in anger, he hits Wendy.

When Joey he returns home, he shows his bruise to Jack and Molly, and tells them what happened and they are very upset about this, and make a decision. Molly's sister and her husband had been inviting Jack and Molly to join them on a church mission trip to Haiti. Jack and Molly decide to take advantage of this invitation by telling Molly's sister that the courts have decided to send an investigative commission to the Porter's home before Joey can return there. Molly claims that a friend of Jack's, a congressman, has helped to arrange this.

Molly's sister is suspicious of this, and calls the congressman. He proves her suspicions correct when he states that he has not helped Jack and Molly. Jack, Molly, and Joey travel to Haiti with Molly's sister and her husband. Jack has arranged for himself, Molly, and Joey to fly out of Haiti to another country, therefore running away from the possibility of having to send Joey back to the Porter's.

However, Molly's sister called Allyson Bower, the child services agent in charge of Joey's case, and told her about the situation. The Haitian police force was notified and they stopped Jack before he could drive the family to the airport.

The Campbells are returned to the United States and they meet with Allyson Bower. She tells them that Wendy Porter is there to see them. Before this, Rip and Wendy reconciled at their home. Rip felt tremendous regret for the way he had treated Joey and Wendy, and it is shown that he will continue to receive help and guidance for his alcoholism and anger problems, in the hope of becoming a better man. Wendy tells the Campbells that Rip never meant to hurt Joey, but that he is not ready to be a father. Jack apologizes to her for trying to bribe Rip and asks her to express his condolences to Rip.

Ultimately, Wendy agrees to give Joey over to them permanently and signs a revised adoption paper, which Rip had also signed. They realize that the Campbells truly love Joey and cannot live without him even though he isn't biologically their child. Wendy and Rip still love him, but they realize that living with the Campbells is the best option for Joey right now, and as Wendy tells Joey goodbye, she expresses that she hopes that her and Rip can have a relationship with him when he grows older. They hug, and Joey returns to Jack and Molly. The last scene in the movie shows Jack, Molly, and Joey sailing on Jack's boat, with Joey steering.

Cast

  • Mira Sorvino
    Mira Sorvino
    Mira Katherine Sorvino is an American actress. She won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her performance in Mighty Aphrodite and is also known for her role as Romy White in Romy and Michele's High School Reunion.- Early life :Sorvino was born in Tenafly, New Jersey...

     as Wendy Porter
  • Barry Pepper
    Barry Pepper
    Barry Robert Pepper is a Canadian actor. He is best known for playing roles like Sergeant Michael Strank in the Clint Eastwood film, Flags of Our Fathers, Private Daniel Jackson in Saving Private Ryan, Roger Maris in 61*, Ned Pepper in True Grit and for his recent role as Robert F...

     as Rip Porter
  • Cole Hauser
    Cole Hauser
    Cole Kenneth Hauser is an American film and television actor.-Family background:Hauser was born in Santa Barbara, California, son of Cass Warner, who founded the film production company Warner Sisters, and actor Wings Hauser. His paternal grandfather was Academy Award-winning screenwriter Dwight...

     as Jack Campbell
  • Kate Levering
    Kate Levering
    Kate Levering is an American actress and dancer. She was born in Sacramento, California.Levering attended El Camino Fundamental High School, where she took part in school musicals and dance classes before graduating in 1997 and leaving for New York City to pursue a career on Broadway. In 2001 she...

     as Molly Campbell
  • Maxwell Perry Cotton
    Maxwell Perry Cotton
    Maxwell Perry Cotton is an American child actor who portrayed Cooper Whedon in the television series Brothers & Sisters.Cotton was born on May 7, 2000 in San Diego, California. His younger brother Mason Vale Cotton is also an actor....

     as Joey Campbell
  • L. Scott Caldwell
    L. Scott Caldwell
    Laverne Scott Caldwell is an American actress known for her role as Rose on Lost.This Chicago native started her career in 1978 as a member of the famed Negro Ensemble Company, making her Broadway debut two years later in the Tony Award nominated play Home...

     as Allyson Bower

Release

The film was released in the United States September 23, 2010. The Times-Colonist named it as one of "10 films you will want to watch" in the Victoria Film Festival
Victoria Film Festival
The Victoria Film Festival is a publicly attended film festival in Victoria, British Columbia running for ten days in February. The festival shows both Canadian and international films and unreels 150 films with 55 Features on 6 screens around Victoria. It attracts a continually growing audience,...

.

The movie was relatively successful, earning $77,960 on its opening weekend, in just 25 theaters. It was then expanded to 60 theaters,and by the end of its run, earned a domestic total of $352,810.

Reception

The film was well-received by critics. On Rotten Tomatoes
Rotten Tomatoes
Rotten Tomatoes is a website devoted to reviews, information, and news of films—widely known as a film review aggregator. Its name derives from the cliché of audiences throwing tomatoes and other vegetables at a poor stage performance...

, 91% of critics gave the film a positive review, based on 11 reviews. Michael Ordona of the Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
The Los Angeles Times is a daily newspaper published in Los Angeles, California, since 1881. It was the second-largest metropolitan newspaper in circulation in the United States in 2008 and the fourth most widely distributed newspaper in the country....

remarked, "'Like Dandelion Dust' is a well-acted, earnest film about adoptive parents' worst nightmare, dealing sympathetically with all parties in a lose-lose situation." Neil Genzlinger of The New York Times
The New York Times
The New York Times is an American daily newspaper founded and continuously published in New York City since 1851. The New York Times has won 106 Pulitzer Prizes, the most of any news organization...

praised the film and said, "There’s no denying that the acting in Like Dandelion Dust, an adoption drama directed by Jon Gunn from a novel by Karen Kingsbury, is superb."

Awards

Deauville Film Festival

2009 Won "Première" Award Feature Film:
Bobby Downes
Heartland Film Festival

2009 Won Audience Award Best Dramatic Feature:
Bobby Downes,
Kevin Downes,
Kerry David,
Jon Gunn
Las Vegas International Film Festival

2009 Won Grand Jury Prize Best Feature:

Best Feature:
Bobby Downes,
Kevin Downes,
Kerry David

Jury Prize Best Actor:
Barry Pepper
New York VisionFest

2009 Won Film Competition Award Acting (Female Lead):
Mira Sorvino

Acting (Male Lead):
Barry Pepper

Production:
Bobby Downes,
Kevin Downes,
Kerry David

Writing:
Michael Lachance,
Stephen J. Rivele
San Diego Film Festival

2009 Won Festival Award Best Actress:
Mira Sorvino
San Luis Obispo International Film Festival

2009 Won George Sidney Independent Film Competition - Special Jury Prize Best Feature:
Jon Gunn,
Kerry David,
Kevin Downes,
Bobby Downes
Sedona International Film Festival

2009 Won Audience Award Best Feature:
Kerry David,
Jon Gunn,
Kevin Downes,
Bobby Downes

Best Feature:
Bobby Downes,
Kevin Downes,
Kerry David
Sonoma Valley Film Festival

2009 Won Audience Award Best Picture:
Kevin Downes,
Bobby Downes,
Kerry David,
Jon Gunn

Honorable Mention Best Actor:
Maxwell Perry Cotton

Jury Award Best Actress:
Mira Sorvino

Best Narrative Feature:
Bobby Downes,
Kevin Downes,
Kerry David
Stony Brook Film Festival

2009 Won Audience Choice Award Best Feature:
Kerry David,
Kevin Downes,
Bobby Downes
Vail Film Festival

2009 Won Audience Award Best Feature:
Kevin Downes,
Bobby Downes,
Kerry David,
Jon Gunn
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