Mark Pellington

The Last Word

First Hit:  I really enjoyed watching Shirley MacLaine, Amanda Seyfried, and AnnJewel Lee Dixon’s characters and interactions.

After seeing this film the other day, I read a couple of reviews about it and although I enjoyed reading their mostly negative views, I’m not in agreement with them.

What worked for me, was Harriet’s (MacLaine) obsessive compulsive behavior. Anyone that knows me, knows I have these tendencies. Therefore, I could easily laugh out loud at her statements and actions. I can understand other people not finding this amusing. I also liked the way both Anne (Seyfried) and Brenda (Dixon) could make their less overwhelming characters be seen, heard and integral to the story as well.

Briefly, Harriet is a wealthy woman living in a large meticulously kept home. The opening scenes see her as feeling forlorn and without purpose. She isn’t liking her life. She picks on her gardener while he cuts her hedges by telling him he’s doing it wrong. Her cook and housekeeper get supplanted preparing Harriet's meal when she steps in and starts cutting the vegetables. Sitting at the table with the meal, she looks at it and doesn't eat it because of her sadness.

When her futile attempt to kill herself fails thereby ending up in the hospital, she tells the doctor what he is saying to her is incorrect and demeans his ability. She’s outright rude to people. She glances at the obituary page in the local newspaper and realizes that she wants to have some control over what her obituary will say about her.

Storming into the local newspaper’s office she demands Anne, the obituary writer, write her obituary over the weekend. By giving Anne an alphabetical list of family and people she knows, she expects to see a wonderful orbit. As Anne does her research she discovers that nobody likes her. Her priest tells Anne that he "hates, just hates," her. Some of these interview scenes are very funny.

But as with most Hollywood films, we’re going to have a great ending. To get there the filmmakers have Harriet deciding to do some good things to redeem herself. One of them is to “help a poor unfortunate black or handicap” person. And into her life comes Brenda (Dixon), who is spunky, thinks the Dewy Decimal System is stupid, and has a fireball firecracker personality. As the film evolves, we get these three people learning to change who they are to become people they want to be. That’s what this film is about. Living closer to one’s truth.

I really enjoyed the scenes where the three of them interacted. The dynamic and different personalities were made for enjoyment: The pulling the “L” off the sign at her old advertising firm, the road trip, the swimming in the swimming hole, Harriet speaking with both her ex-husband Edward (Philip Baker Hall) and her daughter Elizabeth (Anne Heche), were all well thought out. I also really liked how alive Anne became when she was DJ’ing at the local radio station.

MacLaine was strong and there are few that could have made this role work as well as it did. Seyfried was excellent. Her understated strength was well intentioned in this role. She made her wall almost invisible yet clearly defined and prominent. Dixon was so much fun and created a wonderful energy throughout the film. It was a remarkable casting. Heche was perfect as the success oriented estranged daughter. Hall was strong as her former husband sharing his love for her. Stuart Ross Fink wrote a good script that had some clever lines and scenes. Mark Pellington did a good job of directing these three diverse characters. However, there were a couple of scenes, like the three of them walking with sunglasses on in slow motion, that were overdone and tried to be too clever.

Overall:  My own struggles with perfectionism were touched and laughed at while watching this film.

I Melt with You

First Hit: An attempt to show how men struggle to see and share themselves clearly.

There are men who like the camaraderie of men. There are men who long for the camaraderie of the guys they hung out with while in college and felt that those days and those guys were the best of times.

This film attempts to share one story about 4 of these guys. Richard (Thomas Jane), Ron (Jeremy Piven), Jonathan (Rob Lowe) and Tim (Christian McKay) who sent time together and back then we discover they made a pact (or covenant) that if in 25 years things aren’t going well for them, they will die together.

Richard is a writer of one popular book and is now a school teacher. He's run out of ideas and his students don't care much any longer. Ron is an investment banker who is now being investigated by the SEC for ill begotten money.

Jonathan is a medical doctor who has taken to the art of selling drug prescriptions under the table for money and is recently divorced. And Tim is gay and his former partner has just died of aids. They arrive at a beautiful house just south of Carmel on the Big Sur cliffs. They are there for for their annual meeting and seven days of total inebriation. It is all the booze and drugs they can consume while awake with occasional outings (like fishing).

Most of the film is shot inside the house where they get into long drug fueled discussions about very little and, on occasion, an intimate one on one discussion about what is going on in their life to one of the other friends. Distraught Tim has a night of wild sex with a man and woman who came to the house to party, he hates himself, pulls out the pact they made in college and hangs himself in the bathroom.

The rest of the film tells the story about what the others do, or not do, based on the pact they wrote together. The drug crazed binges were very realistic and in some cases the actors didn’t have to dig too deep to find their characters.

However, I did like watching how men will slowly tell their real story behind the veneer one, and that there is a sort of weird honor in living up to pact they made.

Jane was very good as the most vocal and energetic force of the 4 men. Piven was also very good as the guy who long ago turned a corner to illegal work to make his family happy and he aches within from the moment he made that decision. Lowe was interesting to watch because I wondered if he found his role easy or difficult to play based on his past public relationship with drugs. Yes it could be a partial story of his past, and he was convincing. McKay was excellent at being the most troubled one of the group. He was the introspective one of the group who wore his heart on his sleeve. When he shaved off his beard, the audience knew the story was going to change. Glenn Porter wrote the screenplay and at times it was excessive, but other times quite poignant. Mark Pellington directed this cast with a loose hand which allowed the actors some freedom.

Overall: I wouldn’t suggest paying to see this in a theater, but it might be worth a watch if you’re up to watching men indulge obsessively.

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