Skye Davidson
Kate Hudson
Skye Davidson

“Once You Get There, You'll Never Want To Leave”
An academic obsessed with roadside attractions and his tv-star daughter stop at a small desert town to see the world's largest ice cream cone, where, because of an accident that spilled an unknown substance all over the highway, they are forced to spend a few days with the towns eccentric residents.
Desert Blue (1998) Trailer
Skye Davidson
Kate Hudson
Skye Davidson
Blue Baxter
Brendan Sexton III
Blue Baxter
Prof. Lance Davidson
John Heard
Prof. Lance Davidson
Ely Jackson
Christina Ricci
Ely Jackson
Pete Kepler
Casey Affleck
Pete Kepler
Sandy
Sara Gilbert
Sandy
Cale
Ethan Suplee
Cale
Billy Baxter
Peter Sarsgaard
Billy Baxter
Caroline Baxter
Lucinda Jenney
Caroline Baxter
Agent Frank Bellows
Michael Ironside
Agent Frank Bellows
Sheriff Jackson
Daniel von Bargen
Sheriff Jackson
Agent Summers
Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor
Agent Summers
**_Long stop at a desolate settlement in the Southwest and the peculiar people thereof_** A TV actress and her professor father (Kate Hudson and John Heard) stop at a dying mining town in the desert to see a roadside attraction and inadvertently become stuck there for a few days. The eccentric citizens include a young man preoccupied with his late father’s dream (Brendan Sexton III), a girl obsessed with pipe bombs (Christina Ricci), an ATV racer (Casey Affleck) and a woman who runs a diner (Lucinda Jenney). “Desert Blue” (1998) is a quirky indie drama influenced by TV’s Northern Exposure. It’s comparable to Australia’s "Rikky and Pete" from ten years prior and a little “Gas Food Lodging,” as well as later movies like "3 Nights in the Desert” and a bit o’ “Don’t Come Knocking.” There’s an air of emptiness and the story is kind of boring, throwing in a curious subplot about an ominous cola factory. Still, the flick has its points of interest, like finding inspiration in the least likely places. You’ll see some snow here and there, which, by happenstance, was the most snow the isolated town had seen in three decades during shooting. It runs 1 hour, 27 minutes, and was shot in Goldfield in southwest Nevada with the Los Angeles Aqueduct scenes done in Jawbone Canyon, which is almost a 4-hour drive southwest of Goldfield and a 2-hour drive north of Los Angeles. GRADE: B-/C+
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