The three leads all shine, even though they're playing against a backdrop of highly skilled, celebrated Broadway actors, all of whom are generous in playing well beneath their considerable talents. And Cook-an untested actor best known for his crass, broad stand-up comedy bits-gives a performance he should be proud of, bringing just the right cheerful wit and physicality to Mitch. Binoche-well known for her refusal to do Hollywood movies, and for her persona in the French tabloids as a temperamental artiste-absolutely glows here, emanating humor and grace in a role that's brave for being so different from what she usually does. It's even more generous than his fine work in Little Miss Sunshine, and it deserves awards recognition. Carell goes way beyond Michael Scott and The 40-Year-Old Virgin here, playing Dan with humility and restraint, applying a light touch but still letting us feel Dan's heartache and frustration. It's not just a movie about Dan and Marie it's just as much a movie about Dan and Mitch, Dan and his girls, Dan and his parents.Īnother triumph: Two tremendously talented actors and one irritating stand-up comedian all impress with performances that expand our knowledge of just what they can do. Dan brags about his new romantic prospects to his family, and is crestfallen when his brother Mitch (stand-up star Dane Cook) introduces him to his new girl-who is, of course, the very same woman Dan flirted with in the bookstore.ĭan falls for the luminescent Marie (Juliette Binoche)Ī family weekend, a shared secret, and a woman torn between two brothers-it's the stuff of totally lame Lifetime movies, but Hedges' film is filled with minor triumphs and little miracles, not the least of which is the way he breathes new life into the tried-and-true rom-com formula by shifting the focus from the couple to the family dynamic. He flirts with her, talks to her for what seems like hours, scores her phone number, and heads home. Not wanting to sour the bustling family weekend-Dan's siblings, with spouses and kids in tow, are all present as well-he humbly drives into town to pick up a few supplies, promptly falling flat on his face in love with Marie (the luminous Juliette Binoche). But of course, writing about living wisely is much easier than actually doing it, and, after awkwardly breaking up a blossoming romance between one of his daughters and a classmate, then refusing to give his oldest a chance to get behind the wheel for practice driving the family car, Dan ends up at his clan's New England cabin and announces to his parents (Dianne Wiest and John Mahoney) that his own family hates him. Carell-also a Burns, and the Dan of the movie's title-is a widower, raising three girls and providing for them with his salary as a newspaper advice columnist. Steve Carell stars in this small treasure of a movie, a film so filled with heart and imagination that it's sure to be cherished by many. Steve Carell as advice columnist Dan Burns It's a move that bears some similarity to other recent films-the preternaturally blessed family bonds of The Incredibles, maybe-but it's a far cry from the strained relations between the members of April's Burns family, to say nothing of, say, a Wes Anderson film. But with Dan in Real Life, Hedges does something so unusual, its radicalism is sure to provoke enthusiasm and cynicism in equal measure: He portrays a family not as broken or barely keeping it together, but as positively overflowing with affection, with love for one another, with genuine compassion and grace. Which is not to say that he hasn't portrayed his fair share of dysfunction to be sure, the ties of family in his novel What's Eating Gilbert Grape?, his screenplay for About a Boy, and his directorial debut, Pieces of April, are all, at times, a bit shaky, with just the right amount of heartache for really moving comedy. And not dysfunctional family, either-just family, the universal need for acceptance and compassion that we can only get from those we call kin. And Peter Hedges? His muse is the family. The Coens are drawn to the darkly comedic foibles of human nature, to that innate foolishness and depravity that lends itself equally well to a murder story or a madcap quest for a stolen rug. Martin Scorsese is drawn to violence, to the shedding of human blood and all that it entails. Alfred Hitchcock made movies about obsession, madness, and voyeurism.
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