PARK CITY, Utah — Chris Pine gets a lot of scripts sent his way, but when Rachel Lambert's ''Carousel'' landed on his proverbial desk it was like he'd stumbled on something from a different filmmaking era. In Lambert's lyrical prose was a story that, to him, felt very Robert Redford, very ''Ordinary People.''
''My favorite word for this film is quotidian,'' Pine said in a recent interview with The Associated Press. ''It's a film in which nothing happens and yet everything happens.''
It's fitting then that ''Carousel'' is having its world premiere Thursday at the Sundance Film Festival, where it is seeking distribution. The film is a story about love in all its messy incarnations, centered on a single father in Cleveland, Ohio, whose small medical practice is struggling, whose divorce is complicated and whose teenage daughter (Abby Ryder Fortson) is slipping into depression when his high school girlfriend ( Jenny Slate ) comes back to town and they start up again.
Pine felt himself leaning into the script, wanting to know more about the characters and the filmmaker behind it. After watching Lambert's previous film, ''Sometimes I Think About Dying,'' he saw a filmmaker whose cinematic vision was so unique, so distinctly her own that he joined ''Carousel'' not just as the star but a producer as well.
A homegrown movie, shot on film
Lambert had admired Pine from afar for years, for his intelligence and sensitivity on screen, and saw potential for him in the part of Noah.
''There's a rareness to him that I don't see very often in performers,'' Lambert said. ''He reminds me of Jimmy Stewart or Cary Grant, these sort of towers of performers.''
The actual experience of it turned out to be more special than she could have dreamed. Yes, he showed up as an actor, generous and receptive, but he also became a protector of sorts as well. Knowing how much Lambert wanted to shoot both in America and on film, two relatively expensive dreams for an indie, he made his own participation contingent on celluloid.