Little Secrets (2001 film)

Little Secrets is a 2001 independent comedy-drama film starring Evan Rachel Wood, Michael Angarano, and David Gallagher. It premiered in the Heartland Film Festival in October 2001, and made its limited theatrical release on August 23, 2002.

Little Secrets
Theatrical release poster
Directed byBlair Treu
Produced byJessica Barondes
Don Schain
Blair Treu
Written byJessica Barondes
StarringEvan Rachel Wood
Michael Angarano
David Gallagher
Music bySam Cardon
CinematographyBrian Sullivan
Edited byJerry Stayner
Production
company
Distributed byTriStar Pictures
Release date
  • October 17, 2001 (2001-10-17) (Heartland)
  • August 23, 2002 (2002-08-23) (Limited)
Running time
96 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box office$405,792[1]

Plot

Emily Lindstrom (Evan Rachel Wood), an aspiring 14-year-old violinist, spends her summer practicing for an audition to get into the InterMountain Youth Symphony Orchestra in Salt Lake City, while her two best friends, Laurel and Jenny (RuDee Lipscomb and Haley McCormick), go off to camp. She also runs a secret-keeping business, in which other children give her fifty cents to tell her a secret, which she promises to keep; this is a talent that she is normally very good at. Meanwhile, her parents are expecting another baby and seem to care more about it than her.

Philip Lenox (Michael Angarano) and his family move in next door to the Lindstroms. While helping his family unpack, he accidentally breaks a valued chess piece, unknown to his parents, and is caught by Emily as he attempts to bury it in the front garden. He pays her fifty cents to keep his deed a secret, and to hide the piece in her treasure trunk (along with other broken property from her other clients, in paper bags labeled with their names).

When Emily invites Philip to join her in an afternoon tea session using her family's expensive and irreplaceable china, they accidentally break two of the teacups. She is faced with the challenge of keeping her own secret and having someone else know about it. Meanwhile, as he begins falling for her, his older brother, David (David Gallagher), enters the picture. He had been at tennis camp, but was expelled because he allegedly got drunk and was involved in a car accident. Philip tells her this family secret in exchange that she tells him a secret about her secret greetings with her friends. She starts getting upset, and says that a person who drinks and drives will do it again, before storming off. She then starts to lose her secret-keeping talent as she falls for David. He also begins falling for her, which makes Philip jealous.

During her mother's baby shower, David tries to talk to Emily and she reveals that she knows how he was expelled from tennis camp. Afterward, she goes to get her violin from the roof and falls to the ground, necessitating a trip to the hospital. While she is there, her mother gives birth to her new sister, Grace. Everyone is by her hospital bed except David, who is eavesdropping behind the curtain. They ask if Grace looks like she did when she was a baby, and she reveals that she is adopted. Her birth parents were killed by a drunk driver when she was 10 months old, and it's considered a miracle that she lived. The driver was sentenced to a year in prison and, less than a month after being released, crashed into someone else's car and killed himself. Upon hearing this, David feels very guilty and understands why she despises him so much. After she is released from the hospital, she and Philip return all of the paper bags to her clients. To thank him, she kisses him on the cheek. Then David appears, and gives him her first official kiss.

Cast

Reception

The film received mixed reviews upon release. Rotten Tomatoes gave it a 60% rating from 48 critics, with the consensus stating "Little Secrets is wholesome entertainment for the kids, but also rather bland."[2] IMDb's rating is 6 stars. Both the VHS and DVD releases on Amazon.com have a 5 and a half stars rating. It also has won a Film Advisory Board award. Ebert & Roeper gave it "Two Thumbs Up".

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References

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