The following lines between characters Maya and Miles in the 2004 movie Sideways touched viewers and even the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences when the group presented an Oscar for best adapted screenplay to co-writers Alexander Payne and Jim Taylor:
Maya: āWhy are you so into pinot? I mean, itās like a thing with you.ā
Miles: āI donāt know. Itās a hard grape to grow. As you know, right? Itās thin-skinned, temperamental, ripens early. ⦠Itās not a survivor like cabernet, which can just grow anywhere and thrive even when itās neglected. No, pinot needs constant care and attention. ⦠And, in fact, it can only grow in these really specific little tucked-away corners of the world. And only the most patient and nurturing of growers can do it, really; only somebody who really takes the time to understand pinotās potential can then coax it into its fullest expression. And, then, I mean, oh, its flavors. Theyāre just the most haunting and brilliant and thrilling and subtle and ancient on the planet.āĀ
The movie, directed by Payne and based on Rex Pickettās novel of the same name, used metaphor, humor, and gorgeous scenery from Santa Barbara County as it followed two disillusioned men on a wine-tasting trip. It also made household names of its actors: Paul Giamatti, Thomas Haden Church, Virginia Madsen, and Sandra Oh.

An unforeseen impact of the movie, however, was the āSideways effect,ā which longtime journalists Kirk and Mira Advani Honeycutt of Paso Robles detail in their new book Sideways Uncorked, which was released in November.
The book is a celebration of the movieās 20th anniversary and includes interviews with all the playersāfrom the cast and crew to the Central Coast winemakers and restaurateurs who benefitted from the limelight.
āMilesā speech about wine was in Rexās novel, at least most of it ⦠[but] it does contain many of my own thoughts about wine,ā said Payne, who currently circulates between Los Angeles; Omaha, Nebraska; and Athens, Greece. āBefore the movie was released, I never imagined that viewers would appreciate that scene so much. Itās a love scene, I guess, but all theyāre talking about is wine.
āI was quite touched that the Honeycutts wanted to write the book and approached it so thoroughly and thoughtfully. Those of us who worked on the movie had a really good time, and I always thought that thatās one of the reasons people like the movieāthe good times come through the screen. So, Iām very happy that someone has taken the time to chronicle both the experience and the lovely aftermath.āĀ
Pinot noir, French for āblack pineā and most famously associated with the countryās Burgundy region, gets its name from the grapeās tightly clustered, pine-cone-shaped bunches. Its thin skin and tight clusters make it particularly fragile and susceptible to fungus, hence the nickname āheartbreak grape.ā
In the United States, several regions of California as well as Oregonās Willamette Valley provide the perfect growing environment. While the World of Pinot Noir, a nonprofit trade organization founded by Brian Talley and the late Archie McLaren in 2001, helped kickstart the grapeās popularity domestically, the movie catapulted it.
āAmong American oenophiles, pinot noir was certainly known and appreciated before the World of Pinot Noir threw a spotlight on the variety,ā said Kirk, a former chief film critic for The Hollywood Reporter and Los Angeles Daily News. āBut the varietal exploded because of the movie. Thatās how popular culture works. The movie brought pinot into the mainstream. ⦠Suddenlyāfrom the release of the movie in October 2004 to the Oscars in February 2005āeveryone, even non-wine drinkers, knew about pinot noir. It was that quick. Nothing like it has ever happened in the wine world.ā
Talley, owner and vintner of Talley Vineyards in Arroyo Grande, concurs.
āSideways had a huge impact on pinot noir in California and especially the Central Coast,ā he said. āPlus, I think itās the best film about wine ever made.ā

The Honeycuttsā new book, Talley said, renews attention on the film and some of the producers who inspired it.Ā
In the book, the Honeycutts wrote: āNot too long after Sidewaysā box-office success and its rampage through the 2004/2005 awards season, journalists began using the phrase āthe Sideways effect.ā According to Californiaās Wine Institute, U.S. supermarket sales of pinot noir jumped 18 percent in less than a year following the filmās release.ā
The authors continued: āSideways had become a cultural phenomenon. Its impact was local [on] the Santa Barbara wine and hospitality community, regional in its influence on the California wine industry, and national as a hugely popular comedy as well as an unexpected guide to wine drinking in North America and, for that matter, the world.ā
Some filmgoers, they added, even went out and got a Wine & Spirit Education Trust Level 1 crash course in wine.Ā
While the majority of Sideways Uncorked allows readers to relive the movie, interspersed with behind-the-scenes trivia and photographs, the authors also throw in their recommendations for top pinots worldwide.

āWe have ⦠curated a list of pinots from eight California AVAs, Willamette Valley, New Zealand, and Burgundy, with chapters dedicated to each region,ā said Mira, the wine editor at 13 Stars Media and writer for several industry publications.
From the San Luis Obispo Coast American Viticultural Area, she added, āwe have over a dozen wines included in the book plus interviews with various Central Coast winemakers.ā
One recommendation is Talleyās iconic Rosemaryās pinot, vintages of which have achieved 98-point scores in Wine Advocate.Ā
āI have always considered pinot noir to be the grape variety that celebrates both place and the role of the farmer,ā Talley said. āMy favorite examples are generally estate grown so that the winegrower has complete control of viticultural and winemaking practices, from the planting and farming of the vineyard through the bottling of the finished wine.Ā
āAt its very best, pinot noir is ethereal, mysterious, and delicious.ā
Contributor Cherish Whyte enjoyed the Honeycuttsā homage to Sideways. Sheāll be reading Pickettās novel next at cwhyte@newtimesslo.com.
This article appears in Dec 19-29, 2024.

