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  1. Mar 24, 2000 · Sarah is self-confident, outspoken, political. The film, based on the novel by Scott Spencer, is a tug of war between Fielding's desire to work within the system and Sarah's conviction that it's rotten to the core. As they grow closer romantically, they grow further apart politically, until finally their love is like a sacrifice thrown on the ...

  2. United States. Language. English. Budget. $8.5 million. Box office. $327,418. Waking the Dead is a 2000 mystery drama film directed by Keith Gordon and starring Billy Crudup and Jennifer Connelly. The screenplay by Robert Dillon is based on the 1986 novel of the same name by Scott Spencer .

    • $8.5 million
    • Keith Gordon, Stuart Kleinman, Linda Reisman
    • March 24, 2000
  3. Synopsis. The first scene of the movie introduces Fielding Pierce (Billy Crudup) as he is watching news footage showing that Sarah Williams (Jennifer Connelly) has been killed in a suspected car bombing. The reporter indicates that Sarah was an activist from Chicago involved in helping refugees from the Chilean government and that her death may ...

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  5. In 1972, Coast Guard officer Fielding Pierce (Billy Crudup) is passionately drawn to Sarah Williams (Jennifer Connelly), an idealistic activist. She becomes his great love and they swear that they will never part. But, in 1974, fate brutally cleaves their futures: Sarah is murdered in a car bombing. Years pass and Fielding, now an attorney, is living well in Chicago with his socialite ...

  6. Mar 24, 2000 · Waking the Dead: Directed by Keith Gordon. With Billy Crudup, Bill Haugland, Nelson Landrieu, Ivonne Coll. A congressional candidate questions his sanity after seeing the love of his life, presumed dead, suddenly emerge.

  7. Jun 30, 2009 · Waking the Dead isn’t a romance. It isn’t a movie that tells the story of the love of these two people. It is a movie that is talking about love. In general. At the end of the movie, Fielding ...

  8. Aug 23, 2010 · The two central characters are quite similar and both films are set in a somewhat romanticized version of the fairly recent past. Although WWW certainly played up the nostalgia angle more than Waking the Dead, they both feature intense love affairs that somehow don't work out as planned. Both movies end on bittersweet romantic notes.

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