details
Studio: Focus Features
Rating: R
Release Date: Jul 14, 2004
Running Time: 111 mins.
Country Of Origin: United States
synopsis
Set in the beach community of East Hampton, New York, one pivotal summer in the lives of famous children's books author Ted Cole and his beautiful wife Marion is chronicled. Their once-great marriage has been strained by tragedy. The Coles lovingly parent their surviving child, bright 4-year-old Ruth, who takes everything in stride as perhaps only a child can. But Marion's equation of love with loss, coupled with Ted's infidelities, points towards a much-needed change in the relationship. That may come in the form of Eddie O'Hare, the young man Ted hires to work as his summer assistant--and, Ted hopes, the catalyst to invigorate the Coles' bond of marriage. Eddie idolizes Ted, but Ted's erratic work habits soon leave Eddie to his own devices. Marion becomes an object of desire for Eddie, rekindling in her some surprising emotions as a mother and as a woman. To Eddie's surprise and delight, his yearning is potently reciprocated. As he becomes passionately entwined with the seemingly fragile yet increasingly bold Marion, Eddie comes to realize that, similarly, Ted's surface fecklessness hides something deeper within. As the summer draws to a close, Marion and Ted must make difficult decisions about the future of their family.
cast + crew
Ted Cole
Marion Cole
Evelyn Vaughn
Eddie O'Hare
Ruth Cole
Eduardo Gomez
Interviewer
Minty O'Hare
Dr Loomis
Screenplay
Source Material
Producer
Producer
Producer
Executive Producer
Executive Producer
Co-Producer
reviews
Source
rating  PETER TRAVERS - July 14, 2004
Extraordinary in every way, from the pitch-perfect performances to the delicate handling of explosive subject matter, The Door in the Floor is also a model of page-to-screen adaptation. Writer-director Tod Williams, with only one film on his resume (the little-seen 1999 indie The Adventures of Sebastian Cole), had a ballsy idea for making a film of John Irving's 1998 novel A Widow for One Year: Shit-can the last two-thirds of the book and film the first 183 pages. Amazingly, Irving said yes. The… Continued