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Not always right, but no fool either
Posted
Doesn't sound like a major contender...

Everybody's Fine
A Miramax Films release presented in association with Radar Pictures of a Hollywood Gang production. Produced by Gianni Nunnari, Ted Field, Vittorio Cecchi Gori, Glynis Murray. Executive producers, Craig J. Flores, Meir Teper, Mike Weber, Joe Rosenberg, Callum Greene. Co-producer, Nathalie Peter-Contesse. Directed, written by Kirk Jones, based on the 1990 film "Stanno tutti bene" directed by Giuseppe Tornatore; screenplay, Tornatore, Tonino Guerra, Massimo de Rita.

Frank Goode - Robert De Niro
Rosie - Drew Barrymore
Amy - Kate Beckinsale
Robert - Sam Rockwell
Colleen - Melissa Leo
Jack - Lucian Maisel
Jeff - Damian Young
Tom - James Frain


By ANDREW BARKERMuch of Kirk Jones' family-reconciliation drama "Everybody's Fine" takes place on steadily moving trains, Greyhounds and 18-wheelers, appropriately enough for a film that moves reliably and ineluctably toward a well-mapped denouement. Though a bit too artful to merit the pejorative "tearjerker" label, the film is rigorously streamlined to deliver a good emotional uppercut by the end, and purely on the strength of its craft, it connects. But aside from an atypically mannered Robert De Niro, there's very little new to see along the way. Box office should be respectable for the Dec. 4 Miramax release.
Helmer-scripter Jones adapted "Everybody's Fine" from Giuseppe Tornatore's 1990 original, and the two directors prove highly compatible counterparts. For one, Jones shares Tornatore's total lack of embarrassment with sentimentality and stock character types; Jones' 1998 debut, "Waking Ned Devine," deftly skirted the boundary where stereotypes cross over into archetypes. To call that film cliched or predictable would be entirely accurate yet also miss the point.

So, too, with "Everybody's Fine." The trouble here is that while "Waking Ned Devine" had an entire town's worth of quirky characters to help move the narrative along, this single-character-driven piece needs room to breathe, and Jones never allows it (or the audience) to forget its ultimate destination; this may be the tautest, most regimented movie ever made about a meandering road trip. Like Tornatore, Jones is also an extremely literal filmmaker, and when he intercuts scenes with footage of cross-country telephone wires or small talk about a huge gathering storm in the Atlantic, the symbolic functions of both are so straightforward that they almost cease to be metaphors.

Thus, responsibility for providing the film's complexity falls to De Niro (taking over the role played by Marcello Mastroianni in the original), and he mostly delivers. While his elderly traveling widower, Frank Goode, has shades of Jack Nicholson's Warren Schmidt (and a few overcooked scenes), it's nonetheless a role De Niro makes his own, and possibly his first to evoke sincere, unironic goodness. The simmering rage and restless anxiety of his best roles are totally absent here, as is the hamming of his more recent outings; in their place is a quiet, contemplative intensity that suggests an inner life to the character beyond the machinations of the script.

Alone at the beginning except for Perry Como on the soundtrack, Frank prepares for a planned reunion with his four adult children -- their first meeting since the death of their mother eight months prior. He soon receives a barrage of phone calls from his kids, all of whom cancel at the last minute. After a quick visit to his doctor (who warns him not to travel), Frank impulsively sets off to surprise his children in their homes, conspicuously packing four envelopes, all of which may just as well be stamped with "Do not open until final reel."

First on the list is youngest son David, a painter living in a disreputable New York neighborhood. The evidently cell phone-less Frank waits outside his door all night and, when David fails to show up, leaves an envelope under his door and heads on his way.

Next is Amy (Kate Beckinsale) in Chicago, an ad agency owner with a palatial home and seemingly consequent marriage problems, then slacker classical musician Robert (Sam Rockwell) in Denver, and finally Las Vegas dancer Rosie (Drew Barrymore). While Frank is between destinations, we hear the three on the phone with one another, slowly spilling details about David's whereabouts -- which they conspire to keep secret from their father, who concurrently begins to realize how much his children left out in their idealized descriptions of their own lives to him.

Rockwell, Beckinsale and Barrymore are in fine form here, though they have precious little to do. Rockwell fares best, perhaps because his segment of the film has no obvious sociopolitical points to make, while Beckinsale is saddled with some of the film's more stilted dialogue, her character serving as little more than the proverbial career woman with a troubled family life. Melissa Leo has even less of a chance to leave an impression in her quick scene as a truck driver.

Henry Braham's photography is quite strong, unobtrusively capturing the particular melancholy of bus terminals, chain hotel lobbies and roadside scenery. Other tech elements are above average.

With: Katherine Moennig, James Murtaugh, Brendan Sexton III, Kene Holliday, Lily Sheen, Chandler Frantz, Mackenzie Milone, Seamus Davey-Fitzpatrick.

Camera (color), Henry Braham; editor, Andrew Mondschein; music, Dario Marianelli; production designer, Andrew Jackness; art director, Drew Boughton; set decorator, Chryss Hionis; costume designer, Aude Bronson-Howard; sound (Dolby), Thomas Varga; supervising sound editor/sound designer, Glenn Freemantle; re-recording mixer, Mike Dowson; visual effects supervisor, Lev Kolobov; visual effects, Intelligent Creatures; stunt coordinator, Manny Siverio; assistant director, Alex Gayner; casting, Kerry Barden, Paul Schnee. Reviewed at AFI Film Festival (Gala Screenings), Los Angeles, Nov. 3, 2009, Nov. 3, 2009. MPAA Rating: PG-13. Running time: 95 MIN.
 
Posts: 17507 | Registered: January 26, 2005Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Ethel Twist
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This reminds me of the great year Drew Barrymore is having...

Starring in the critical hit Grey Gardens opposite two time oscar winning legend Jessica Lange.

Directing and starring in the extremely satisfying Whip It.

Starring in Everybody's Fine starrting opposite two time oscar winning legend Robert DeNiro.

She also appeared this year in He's Just Not That Into You opposite many of the trendy actors of the moment.

Not to shabby!
 
Posts: 3891 | Location: Church | Registered: July 10, 2003Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Posted Hide Post
First time I heard starring in He's Just Not That Into You referred to as an accomplishment!
 
Posts: 6188 | Registered: July 05, 2008Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Forums Moderator
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Wait is De Niro definitely campaigning as a lead for this film? This almost sounds like an ensemble piece.
 
Posts: 9030 | Registered: July 29, 2002Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Posted Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by DoubleD:
Wait is De Niro definitely campaigning as a lead for this film? This almost sounds like an ensemble piece.


I have seen the Italian film this is based on and the lead character is in basically every scene as he visits his various relatives.
 
Posts: 27152 | Location: Phoenix, AZ | Registered: February 02, 2003Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Ethel Twist
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quote:
Originally posted by Pucifer:
First time I heard starring in He's Just Not That Into You referred to as an accomplishment!


I agree that is a bit of a stretch, but at Drew has covered her bases - directing, starring with legends, starring with trendy hot young things.
 
Posts: 3891 | Location: Church | Registered: July 10, 2003Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Posted Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by ETHELCHARLES:
quote:
Originally posted by Pucifer:
First time I heard starring in He's Just Not That Into You referred to as an accomplishment!


I agree that is a bit of a stretch, but at Drew has covered her bases - directing, starring with legends, starring with trendy hot young things.


Well, her company did produce it, and it did make a lot money especially for its budget. So I would say that it was definitely an accomplishment for her based on that alone. Thus far she has a pretty good track record of the films that her company has produced, except for perhaps Whip It which unfortuately didn't fare that well at the box office.

On the other hand, it was well received critically, and I could see it becoming a cult hit later on. I think the poor reception at the box office was was more the way they marketed it, and not the project itself.

Anyhow, as to the topic, I have taken Robert DeNiro out of my predictions now because I think it's similar to Last Chance Harvey where there's buzz for an older star who hasn't been nominated for awhile, but ultimately, he doesn't get in. Plus, if Crazy Heart does get a limited release this year, I think Bridges then moves into that beloved veteran spot that DeNiro would have had, except Bridges will ultimately be competitive for the Oscar instead of just filler.
 
Posts: 929 | Registered: May 22, 2005Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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ROAR OF THE GREASEPAINT, SMELL OF THE CROWD
not to mention her side gig shilling facepaint for covergirl, puritan that i am i find demeaning though still not as kooky and outré as ellen degeneres... glad i'm not a girl, no amount of makeup will ever make me pretty...
 
Posts: 6188 | Registered: July 05, 2008Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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