Silver Linings Playbook
David O. Russell, 2012 (8.7*)
This is a surprising romance, better than I expected, largely because
the screenplay is refreshingly different, with some witty and original
dialogue, and because the cast is uniformly excellent, especially actress
Jennifer Lawrence who was just 22 when she filmed it, the film is transported beyond the sum
of its parts. As a result, Lawrence has already won 14 acting awards for this
performance (and 43 in her short career – even though she started on tv at 14,
she’s still only made about 11 feature films, with three more currently in production.
Apparently she’s a natural – I didn’t realize that she was an amateur from Kentucky with no acting lessons and was literally discovered while walking on the sidewalk (at age 14) when I was stunned by her
Oscar®-nominated performance in Sundance Winner Winter’s Bone, expertly
and subtly directed by Debra Granik back in 2010.
Don’t forget that Natalie Portman was discovered at age 12
at a laundromat with her mom on a Saturday by a fashion model agent, invited to
a photo audition on Monday, but was instead then sent to a movie audition for The Professional (aka
Leon), and by Wednesday had the lead part in that cult-classic action film
from Luc Besson. ..and she was excellent.
Lawrence as Tiffany (L) and herself on IMDB
Bradley Cooper plays a semi-psychotic young man, diagnosed as bi-polar, Pat
Solitano, inside an asylum in the beginning, who we soon find out caught his
wife in their shower with another man and nearly beat him to death in
justifiable rage. He is now being released, but has a long list of jittery
townspeople afraid of him, and a local blue that checks on him regularly. In
what some describe as cruel punishment, he is forced to live with his parents to
ensure his anger is at least being managed. His father, hilariously played by
Oscar®-nominee Robert De Niro, who has shined lately in comedies as all you
Fokker fans know (“I got my eye on you”), is high level OCD here, and makes
book on all Philadelphia games – he’s particularly obsessed with the Eagles in
the NFL. He blames losses and victories on the absence or presence of his son
in the living room during the games, for he is banned from Veteran’s Stadium in
Philly for life for constantly getting into fights with other fans.
His mother is capably played by superb veteran actress Jacki
Weaver from Australia, who started in movies in 1968, and was a well-deserved supporting
actress nominee for the vicious Aussie crime film Animal Kingdom (2010), in
which she played the proud mother of four bank robbing and murdering sons – she was also the family accountant. In this
film she wasn’t given a very strong part to exercise her acting ability, but
was still perfect enough to get her 2nd Oscar® nomination. She’s won
14 awards for her acting in her career, in all honesty, too low a total for
someone of her caliber – she deserves many more parts like the one in Animal
Kingdom, for which she won 8 of those awards, including one from the National
Board of Review. (Melissa Leo in The Fighter beat her out for the Oscar®that
year – I preferred Weaver)
As soon as he is released, and still obsessed with getting
back together with his unfaithful wife, he goes to a dinner at a best friend’s
house, where he meets equally wacky Jennifer Lawrence, whose husband was a
policeman killed on duty, a life changing experience that pretty much turned
her into the local tramp. This begins what is one of the more engaging cinema
friendships, with sharp enough dialogue that the actors seem inspired to give
the screenplay their best; this is certainly a career best for Bradley Cooper,
and he’s been rewarded with an Oscar® nomination for best actor, but has the
daunting task of robbing master thespian Daniel-Day Lewis of this third best
actor statue. (And he should be going for his fourth, as his creation of Bill
the Butcher in Scorsese’s Gangs of New York is one of the most memorable in
cinema history, and perhaps his best performance – certainly his most evil
creation.)
The story likely moved a bit slow for some, and is perhaps a
little Hollywood for others, but for me I enjoyed the slow evolution of the bizarre
friendship between Pat and Tiffany (which at times is like that of Harry and
Sally), and the growing understanding of his father’s obsession. There’s enough
humor in the dialogue that the films keeps it spark while the story develops.
It’s another gem for the Weinstein company, who has a knack for these indie
films that turn into Oscar® winners. like The King's Speech in 2010 (which wasn't nearly as riveting to me as Winter's Bone). They bought the rights to the book,
intending it to be produced first by Anthony Minghella and Sydney Pollack, who
both died in 2008. So it went to David O. Russell due to some personal
experience in this mental arena, and he also wrote the excellent screenplay
along with directing.
This now belongs on a short list of enjoyable film
friendship-romances like Groundhog Day, Shakespeare in Love, When Harry Met Sally, A Room With a View, Annie Hall, The Shop Around the Corner, and The Philadelphia Story. Each of these is also a comedy, which I think helped them succeed,
especially if you imagine each as a straight dramatic romance instead. Silver
Linings is the type of film that often wins Oscars, and I think Jennifer
Lawrence has to be the front runner for actress, while the film could win a few
more, like director, picture, screenplay, though personally I prefer Beasts of theSouthern Wild for those three, and would love to see young Quevezhanie Wallis
upset Jennifer Lawrence, who will have a long career and more Oscar® chances.
[..and young Nazie is “the man”, while Jennifer is most decidedly “a woman”]
Silver Linings is the first film since 2004’s Million Dollar Baby to be nominated for the big five Oscars®: picture, director, actor,
actress, screenplay, which won four of those (only Eastwood lost as actor, while Hilary Swank and Morgan Freeman both won) – and the first since Reds in 1981 to get nominations for
all four acting categories - none won, but Warren Beatty won his only Oscar® to date, as director.