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  • Theresa Loe is the award-winning Co-Executive Producer & Canning Expert on Growing A Greener World TV. She blogs here about Living Homegrown®, local and fresh-from-the-garden.
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Comments

Kat

I hope Hollywood's portrayal of gardens doesn't create the same sort of societal illness that it's portrayal of women does. Imagine trying to keep up with that garden?

Theresa Loe/LivingHomegrown

My point exactly Kat! That is all we need. It is hard enough to deal with the slick magazine photos...but that movie garden is to DIE for!

Tara Dillard

The garden was too perfect. It looked like a CHEMICAL COMPANY ad circa 1962. The garden lacked ROMANCE & MYSTERY.

Scale & flow were lacking. Did it tie into the rest of the landscape? Nope. Looked like it was plopped from a space ship from planet perfect.

I think the movie character would have had a potager instead of a vegetable garden.

Ironically, I posted about this garden this morning.

Garden & Be Well, XO Tara

Debra Lee Baldwin

Wait 'til the bunnies find it. Or the snails, gophers and slugs. We have them all here in California, Hollywood sets included. Unless this garden is indoors? Well, then, wait until those cabbages notice they're not getting real sunshine, fresh air and good drainage!

Cameron

We loved the movie and the "staged" garden!

My husband and I are heading out to LA/Santa Monica in few days where we hope to bask in warm temps! It's not usually too cold here in North Carolina, but this year...

Cheers,
Cameron

Theresa Loe/LivingHomegrown

Tara,
I can't comment on the scale and the flow because I only saw photos and have not yet seen the movie. But I did have the thought that in order to look that perfect it would have to be sprayed in real life. I will go check out your post! Thanks for commenting here.

Debra-
Good point my friend! Love to see what it looked like a month later. LOL.

Cameron-
I think most of the gardeners who saw the movie loved the look and idea of the perfect garden. It made people want to garden too which is alway a good thing!

You will have a wonderful time here in So. CA. The weather is picture perfect right now. Everyone is wearing shorts and flip flops. Bring sunscreen! Enjoy!!

~Theresa

Michelle Derviss

The whole thing seems humorous to me.
I once had Ortho come shoot a TV commercial at an all organic garden that we installed and maintained. Talk about truth in advertising - not !.
And then one year while participating in a show garden exhibit I had to wire lemons onto camellia espalier plants because our lemon plants had died in a frost and it was already printed in the program that there would be a espalier lemon hedge.
Oy. I guess I am just a guilty as those TV producers.

Theresa Loe/LivingHomegrown

Michelle! How funny is that? You had to wire on lemons! Naughty!

TC

This kinda reminds me of an article I wrote for the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette:
http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/08026/852260-47.stm

commonweeder

I'm glad I got all this info about the garden before I saw the movie. I am old enough not to be seduced by movies and magazines, but we do so long for fantasy to be real. I think my potager has lots of romance and mystery, but it is not very photographable.

Catalina

Ha ha! Movie gardens are never real (I hope!).
Can't wait to see what you make for the CanJam!

Theresa Loe/LivingHomegrown

Hey T.C. -
You are right. You and I were on the same wavelength here...as usual. Loved your article!


Commonweeder-
I bet your potager is more photographable than you think!!! But as long as it is providing you with what you need, who cares! Right?

Theresa Loe/LivingHomegrown

Catalina-

Thanks for stopping by!

I have not decided yet which recipe to choose. I still need to post about the CanJam. No one here knows about it yet. I will post about it later this week. What are YOU canning this week?

~T

Joe Lamp'l

Well, I feel better now. As a TV producer of a vegetable gardening show, I especially was lusting for that same look for my show. However, I chalked it up to the good fortune of living in so. California. It's nice to know that even in Hollywood, those gardens are still crafted by set designers. Living in the southeast, we could only dream of a garden like that. But as was pointed out already, even I who knows better wanted that garden. I wonder how many "soon to be gardeners" were inspired by that garden and will soon find out, gardens like that, really don't exist in the real world. I'm sure the movie producers weren't thinking about that when they made this garden but for us real gardeners who try to tell it like it is, maybe that picture perfect garden did more harm than good...especially to the newbies that think they'll get the same results. Thanks Theresa for this insightful and interesting post.

BTW, I know of one new gardener that because of the movie, was inspired to learn more about gardening. She googled "vegetable gardening" and found me. Turned out it was an old college girlfriend I hadn't heard from since then.

Theresa Loe/LivingHomegrown

Joe,

That is very cool that someone found you because of the movie garden! Great story to tell!

Perhaps as garden communicators, we just need to spread the word about enjoying the fantasy of the garden without expecting the results in real life.

But I think that if it gets MORE people gardening, it is a good thing. We can teach them the rest.

~Theresa

Susan Betts

Totally inspires!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I know it is way too perfect but it gets my gardening engine rev'd up!!!!!!!! Fantasy!!!!!Love it::)))

Michele Linder

I'm a little late with my comment, but since I'm deaf and have no theatres in my area that show rear-window or open captions I have to wait until something comes to DVD before watching. Thus, my delay in seeing this movie for the first time.

I was totally inspired by the garden in "It's Complicated", and the timing of my viewing was perfect for the northern MN season, as early June is recommended for planting in this zone. Of course, I'm not stupid and know that movie gardens tend to be fake, but I've been working on my raised bed garden (we are nothing but sand and rock, so raised beds are necessary) for three years now and this years it's finally coming together. I do like order and neatness, but also agree that more wild and natural garden tends to be my preferred taste, so what I ultimately will end up with is a combination of both extremes--at least I'm hoping that's what I'll end up with. :o)

The garden in the movie got me moving with inspiration and I worked five consecutive, 12 to 14 hour days planting and finishing the beds. I wasn't inspired to make a perfect "movie" garden, but seeing such healthy, robust and beautifully green plants was inspiring in that I wanted to get my seeds and plants in the ground so that I could begin reaping the bounty of the short, northern growing season!!

However, as I watched the movie I wondered why a gourmet cook never seemed to pick anything from her garden, as it looked untouched, simply for show. It a movie!!

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