'The Longest Ride' movie scenes to be filmed at Wake Forest
Updated: 4:45 PM EDT Jul 21, 2014 Some scenes for "The Longest Ride," based on the Nicholas Sparks romance novel of the same name, will be filmed on the campus of Wake Forest University in about two weeks.The crew will be filming both outside and inside campus scenes for about 12 hours August 4, Wake Forest officials said Monday.Much of the filming will take place on and near Hearn Plaza, and more filming will also likely take place in one classroom building.Closures of parking lots and some campus roads are expected, though exact details are still being finalized.Wake Forest students recently received an email with information on how they could become paid extras during filming. More information is expected to be released later this month.The movie's lead stars are Scott Eastwood and Britt Robertson. Alan Alda also has a role in the film."The Longest Ride" novel was released in September. This will be the ninth Sparks novel to be adapted to film.Sparks lives in New Bern. WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. — Some scenes for "The Longest Ride," based on the Nicholas Sparks romance novel of the same name, will be filmed on the campus of Wake Forest University in about two weeks. The crew will be filming both outside and inside campus scenes for about 12 hours August 4, Wake Forest officials said Monday. Much of the filming will take place on and near Hearn Plaza, and more filming will also likely take place in one classroom building. Closures of parking lots and some campus roads are expected, though exact details are still being finalized. Wake Forest students recently received an email with information on how they could become paid extras during filming. More information is expected to be released later this month. The movie's lead stars are Scott Eastwood and Britt Robertson. Alan Alda also has a role in the film. "The Longest Ride" novel was released in September. This will be the ninth Sparks novel to be adapted to film. Sparks lives in New Bern.
Showing all 6 items Jump to:
Filming LocationsEdit
This is an archived article and the information in the article may be outdated. Please look at the time stamp on the story to see when it was last updated. WILMINGTON, N.C. — Nicholas Sparks’ new movie “The Longest Ride,” which was partially filmed on Wake Forest University’s campus, has made $13.5 million during opening weekend. The Wilmington Star News reported that the movie landed third place for the weekend following the $60.5 million made by “Furious 7” and the $19 million by “Home.” Sparks’ new movie made about what the studio had predicted, but did not have the massively successful opening that some of his other movies have had, according to the paper. The plot of the romantic drama involves the life of an elderly widower who becomes entwined with that of a young college student and the cowboy she loves. It is directed by George Tillman Jr. and stars Britt Robertson, Scott Eastwood and Jack Huston. The movie was partially shot in Winston-Salem and Wilmington, among other locations around the state. The movie only has a 29 percent approval rating by critics on Rotton Tomatoes, but Imdb.com users gave it a 7.1 out of 10. Copyright 2022 Nexstar Media Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Longest Ride Directed byGeorge Tillman Jr.Written byCraig BolotinBased onThe Longest Rideby Nicholas SparksProduced by
Production
Release date
Running time 128 minutes[1]CountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget$34 million[2]Box office$63 million[3]The Longest Ride is a 2015 American Neo Western romantic drama film directed by George Tillman Jr. and written by Craig Bolotin. Based on Nicholas Sparks' 2013 novel of the same name, the film stars Britt Robertson, Scott Eastwood, Jack Huston, Oona Chaplin, and Alan Alda. The film was released on April 10, 2015 by 20th Century Fox. PlotProfessional bull rider Luke Collins (Scott Eastwood) meets Sophia Danko (Britt Robertson), an art student at Wake Forest University, after she attends a PBR event. On the way home from their first date, they spot a car crash in the woods and help rescue an elderly man from the vehicle, along with a box full of letters. In the hospital, Sophia visits the 91-year old man she rescued, Ira Levinson (Alan Alda). He explains the letters are what he wrote as a teenager to his late wife, Ruth, and she offers to read them to him, which tell the story of how they met and fell in love in 1940. In flashbacks, Ruth (Oona Chaplin) tells a young Ira (Jack Huston) that she wants a big family, and he eventually proposes to her before leaving to fight in World War II. However, Ira is shot during an attack and is later informed that he can no longer have children, news that causes distance between Ruth and him when he returns. Regardless, they decide to make it work and move in together, decorating the house with many paintings that Ruth and he love. Back in the present day, Ira is moved to a nursing home where Sophia continues to visit. Luke continues bull riding as Sophia and he fall in love. Luke attends an art exhibit with Sophia, which he finds disinteresting, and they realize how different their two worlds are; Luke says he does not feel their relationship will work. Sophia goes to Ira for advice, who tells her how he and Ruth made it work. In flashbacks, it is revealed that Ruth, a school teacher, became attached to a young student named Daniel McDonald after finding out she and Ira wouldn't have children of their own. They wanted to adopt him but Daniel's uncaring relatives wouldn't allow it. Luke is injured while riding and is rushed to hospital. He is advised not to ride again but he refuses to accept that his career is over. Following an argument, Luke and Sophia break up. In flashbacks, Ira and Ruth break up because she cannot see a life without children in their future. However, weeks later, Ruth returns as she cannot live without Ira. Decades later, now 80 years old, Ira wakes up to find Ruth has died in her sleep. One night, a woman knocks on his door, claiming to be the wife of Daniel McDonald, the child they almost adopted when they were younger, and informs Ira that Daniel, who later became a professor of physics and astronomy, has died. She gives him a portrait of Ruth that Daniel had painted, with a message on the back that reads: "Ruth Levinson, third grade teacher. She told me I could be anything I wanted to be when I grew up". Sophia and Luke are contacted by Ira's attorney who tells them that he has died and an auction will be held for his collection of paintings. Meanwhile, Luke wins his last ride, and the event championship, but feels disappointed because Sophia is not there to share it with him. Going to the auction, he buys the first piece of art, Daniel's "Portrait of Ruth". Sophia and Luke reconcile with a kiss after he tells her he will not ride anymore because what he really wants is to be with her for the rest of his life. The auctioneer then reveals that Ira's clause in the auction rules was: whoever buys Daniel's portrait will receive the entire collection, worth almost $200 million, as it is the piece of art that meant the most to him. A year later, Luke and Sophia, now married, have built a museum dedicated to Ira and Ruth and their paintings. Luke takes Sophia to Black Mountain College where Ira and Ruth used to spend their wedding anniversary. They sit under the same tree and read Ira's letters together. Cast
ProductionDevelopmentIn April 2014, Fox 2000 Pictures set a film adaptation to be released on April 10, 2015, with George Tillman Jr. in final talks to direct, Craig Bolotin adapting the screenplay, and Britt Robertson as Sophia Danko, Oona Chaplin as Ruth, Scott Eastwood as Luke Collins, Jack Huston as Young Ira, and Alan Alda as old Ira.[5][6][7][8][9] FilmingPrincipal photography began on June 16, 2014, in Wilmington and Winston-Salem, North Carolina.[10][11][12] On July 28, filming started in Jacksonville, where a major rodeo scene was shot. The PBR was the technical advisor and producer for all of the bull riding events.[13] PBR bull riders doubled for Scott and appeared in the film.[13] The crew then moved to Winston-Salem at the Lawrence Joel Veterans Memorial Coliseum.[14][15] ReceptionBox officeThe Longest Ride grossed $37,446,117 in North America and $25,498,698 in other territories for a worldwide total of $62,944,815.[3] In its opening weekend, the film grossed $13,019,686, finishing third at the box office behind Furious 7 ($59,585,930) and Home ($18,532,280).[3] Critical receptionThe Longest Ride has received negative reviews from critics. On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film has a rating of 31%, based on 124 reviews, with an average rating of 4.37/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "The Longest Ride is less manipulative than the average Nicholas Sparks film, but it's still saccharine and hopelessly contrived — not that it'll matter to the target audience."[16] On Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating, the film has a score of 33 out of 100, based on 30 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable reviews".[17] It earned an average grade of "A" in CinemaScore poll on an A+ to F scale,[18] marking the first Sparks feature adaptation to earn an A in 11 years since The Notebook (2004).[19] Accolades
Home mediaThe Longest Ride was released on DVD and Blu-ray on July 14, 2015. References
External links
|