Interstate 60

Interstate 60 (also known as Interstate 60: Episodes of the Road) is a 2002 American independent road film[3] written and directed by Bob Gale, in his directorial debut,[4] and starring James Marsden, Gary Oldman, Amy Smart, Christopher Lloyd, Chris Cooper, Amy Jo Johnson, Art Evans, Ann-Margret and Kurt Russell, with a cameo by Michael J.

In a bar, a college student affirms that the United States does not have any folktales involving characters who grant wishes.

His father responds by handing him an admission letter to law school that Neal does not want to attend.

Neal wakes up in the hospital, where a doctor named Ray comes in and does a sight test using playing cards.

Neal asks if he got it right, and Ray points out that the cards actually had red spades and black hearts, emphasizing that things are not always what they seem.

On his journey, Neal meets a man who can consume unnatural quantities of food and drink; a woman looking for perfect sex; a mother looking for her son, who lives in a city where the population is addicted to a government-controlled drug; a dying ex-advertiser on a crusade to punish dishonesty; and Mrs. James, who runs the Museum of Art Fraud that actually contains real masterpieces posing as fakes.

At the town of Morlaw, where all citizens are lawyers who spend their days suing each other, Neal finds Lynn, the imprisoned woman he has been dreaming about and painting.

's broken one), Grant uses his powers to "warp" Neal back in time, where he wakes up in the hospital before he first encountered Ray.

They include: Robert Koehler, writing in Variety, criticized the film's "juvenile obviousness" and says that the themes do not feel genuine.