A Loss of Innocence
A Loss of Innocence | |
---|---|
Genre | Romantic drama |
Based on | On This Star by Virginia Sorensen[1] |
Screenplay by | Joyce Eliason (teleplay) |
Directed by | Graeme Clifford |
Starring | Jennie Garth Rob Estes Mike Doyle |
Theme music composer | Mark Snow |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
Production | |
Producers | James T. Davis (producer) Joyce Eliason (executive producer) Frank Konigsberg (executive producer) Larry Sanitsky (executive producer) |
Cinematography | Gordon C. Lonsdale |
Editor | Kimberly Ray |
Running time | 91 minutes |
Original release | |
Network | ABC |
Release |
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A Loss of Innocence (also known as The End of Eden)[2][3] is a 1996 American romantic drama television film that first aired on September 29, 1996, on the ABC television network. It is based on the novel On This Star by Virginia Sorensen.[1]
Plot
Erik Eriksen, a successful New York pianist, returns to Templeton, his birthplace and a Mormon community, where he is treated distrustfully by its members, including his family, for having "betrayed" them by not living his life according to their faith. Only his mother and his younger half-brother Jens, support him unconditionally. However, trouble arises when Erik falls in love with Chelnica "Chel", a beautiful young woman who plays the piano and is a dedicated Mormon, who also happens to be Jens's fiancée.
Cast
- Jennie Garth as Chelnicia "Chel" Bowen
- Rob Estes as Erik Eriksen
- Polly Holliday as Christina Eriksen
- Mike Doyle as Jens Eriksen
- Michael Milhoan as Ivor Eriksen
- Anne Sward as Ida Eriksen
- Scott Wilkinson as John Brown
- Marcia Dangerfield as Seenie
- Melissa Moore as Esther Bowen-Dorius
- Maria Mejias as Ruby Snow
- Bill Osborn as Oley Eriksen
- Peter Morse as Junior Eriksen
- Wendy Lee Richhart as Hedvig Eriksen
- Jed Knudsen as Karl Dorius
- Steve Anderson as Bill Mac
- Beverly Rowland as Woman on Train
- Reb Fleming as Seamstress
- Mary Pederson as Verla May
- Danny Rees as Justice of the Peace
- Allan Groves as Andy
- Dennis Saylor as Jake
Production
The film was shot mostly in the Heber Valley, Utah.[1]
Reception
Writing for Deseret News, Scott D. Pierce reviewed the film, criticizing its plot as predictable, saying that "the movie telegraphs its every move well in advance." Pierce also criticized Garth's acting, saying, "Why either brother is interested is somewhat of a mystery. As portrayed by Garth, Chel comes off as sort of a simple-minded fool." Conversely, he praised the film's look, saying "Loss looks great - and not just the Utah scenery," saying that the period costumes "add an air of authenticity to a movie that, unfortunately, is sometimes as foolish as it is predictable." Pierce summed up the film with the rhetorical question, "What if Danielle Steel had set one of her romance novels in 1920s Utah and used the LDS Church as a backdrop?", ultimately concluding that "Loss is, in the end, a predictable romance novel brought to TV. It's difficult to take it any more seriously than that."[1]
References
- ^ a b c d Pierce, Scott D. (September 28, 1996). "ABC'S `A LOSS OF INNOCENCE' IS ROMANCE NOVEL SET IN UTAH". Deseret News. Retrieved June 29, 2020.
- ^ "The End of Eden (1996)". British Film Institute. Retrieved June 29, 2020.
- ^ "The End of Eden (1996)". digiguide.tv. Retrieved June 29, 2020.