The Tollbooth

The Tollbooth is a 2004 coming-of-age film directed by Debra Kirschner and starring Marla Sokoloff.[1] The plot concerns a young artist struggling to forge her own identity in the big city, while her Jewish parents keep watch from just over the bridge in Brooklyn.

The Tollbooth
Directed byDebra Kirschner
Written byDebra Kirschner
StarringMarla Sokoloff
Release date
  • 2004 (2004)
Running time
85 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Plot

Recently out of art school, Sarabeth (Marla Sokoloff) gets a job as a waitress and begins her struggle as a New York City artist. With her angsty and cynical personality, she doesn't have much patience for her family—a nagging mother, a father who is always misquoting Kafka, one sister who just got pregnant with her sweet but dopey husband, and another sister who is 'perfect' until she announces she's a lesbian at Rosh Hashanah dinner. Her boyfriend Simon (Rob Mcelhenney)'s choice to live in the suburbs with a great sound system instead of hip and unpredictable New York has given Sarabeth doubts about their future together. She uses her canvas as an escape, where she can make sense of it all. Though frustrated that she grew up being constantly reminded of relatives who were murdered in the Holocaust and how much she hates going to synagogue, she's forced to integrate Judaism into her modern life.

When she overhears a guest at a 4th of July barbecue make an anti-Semitic comment, she realizes she doesn't want to fit it in to this crowd, and that she is proud of her heritage.

Cast

gollark: They need your location and payment details, not much else.
gollark: https://osmarks.tk/nemc/
gollark: In this country the government has "computing" lessons which involve just teaching people Scratch, which annoyed me enough that I wrote a blog post criticizing this.
gollark: It would also be nice if people actually knew anything about networking.
gollark: I fear that some sort of computer troubleshooting class may just end up teaching people to blindly try one specific thing they learned instead of... actually problem-solving. Which would admittedly be better than now.

References

  1. Catsoulis, Jeannette (February 2006). "The Tollbooth - Movie - Review - NY Times". The New York Times. Retrieved January 15, 2020.
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