Sleepy little Plympton has seen an influx of Hollywood as filming has begun for a new major motion picture, “At the Sea” starring A-lister Amy Adams and Australian actor Murray Bartlett of White Lotus fame, who plays her husband.
While this is her third movie in Massachusetts, we haven’t seen Adams in Halifax or Plympton before. Her Boston-based performances in The Fighter and American Hustle each won her Oscar nominations. Our small-town vibe must be quite an experience for the cosmopolitan entourage.
The film, written by Kata We’ber and directed by husband Kornel Mundruczo’, has many familiar faces in the cast, including Brett Goldstein, (Ted Lasso); Chloe East, (The Fabelmans); Dan Levy, (Good Grief); Jenny Slate, (Marcel the Shell with Shoes On); and Rainn Wilson, (The Office); according to IMDb.
The story line, as reported in Deadline, follows the life of Laura, played by Adams, after a long rehabilitation, as she returns to her family at their beach holiday home where she must readjust to the complicated life she left behind. Now she is forced to face the following next chapter of her life without the career that gave her fame, fortune, and her identity.
Adams has been nominated for an Academy Award six times, for her performances in American Hustle, Junebug, The Master, Doubt, The Fighter, and Vice.
Readers will likely remember her break-through performance in Enchanted, where her dance and singing abilities shone as she came to life as a real Disney-style princess; and Arrival, as a linguist tasked to translate language from creatures from another world.
Seeing the familiar location transformed to into a seaside set is quite a shock at first, but then what is film but a glimpse into what’s possible with a bit of sleight of hand? It’s really a magical experience.
Adams is busy with several projects either in the works, just finished, or coming soon.
The film has brought a nice bump to the local economy as it hires locals for police details, parking area rental, food for the cast and crew, actors and stand-ins, and more. Residents should welcome more film-making to the area.