Monday, February 21, 2011

Two Movies

SECONDHAND LIONS, 2003
The lighting is dim and mellow as it plays throughout the shadowy, beautifully disheveled old farm house that two ancient brothers own, and as it illuminates the hard-scrabble vistas of the rural-Texas setting where large 1950s vehicles bounce along dusty dirt roads.. In this coming-of-age saga Haley Joel Osment plays a boy left at the Texas ranch of eccentric uncles (the brothers) Michael Caine and Robert Duvall. Duvall is in his element. Michael Caine less so, The uncles regale Osment with amazing tales of their past, which include adventures in the French Foreign Legion and saving a princess from slave traders and an Arab sheik. Yearning for the old days of adventure, they acquire and intend to shoot for sport an old lion, but the decrepitude of the lion gives them pause, as does the boy’s rapport with her. The movie kept my attention throughout, although the clarity and maturity of the Osment character seemed unlikely.


DINNER FOR SCHMUCKS, 2010,

This “screwball comedy” film is the American adaptation of the French film, (The Dinner of Cretins). Steve Carell is extremely convincing as an idiot-savant who is too dim to know that he’s being used as a promotional gimmick for the so-star’s corporate ambitions. He makes wonderful dioramas, with dead mice impersonating characters in famous paintings. Carell miraculously maintains the characterization of his zany but pure-hearted role. Paul Rudd is the corporate guy, and didn’t interest me as much. Perhaps due to its French inspiration, there are sex themes that push the envelope a bit. As much by what it includes as by what it leaves out, the film brings up a question about movies and monogamy. Rudd’s art-curator girlfriend is wooed by an artist with animal magnetism whom she represents. Does one have to end up with the girl, or can they both share her?

2 comments:

Deborah Allison said...

Saw the 2nd-hand Lions and enjoyed the haziness of whether it was fantasy or not. Osment seems to always play kids who are much wiser and more sensitive than the adults.

Also saw the French version of the Dinner movie, years ago. A lot of word puns and slapstick. But the premise seemed very mean. Of course the victim is clueless and don't we say that "God looks out for fools".

Trevor Burrowes said...

"...enjoyed the haziness of whether it was fantasy or not."

Nice way to put it. I thought the Texas scenes were visually hazy, never thinking that there was another kind of haziness as well. :-)