Showing posts with label Robert De Niro. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Robert De Niro. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 9, 2019

Silver Linings Playbook (2012)


Directed by David O. Russell

Screenplay written by David O. Russell 

Based on the novel written by Matthew Quick

Starring Bradley Cooper, Jennifer Lawrence, Robert De Niro and Jacki Weaver











Silver Linings Playbook will always be one of those movies I come back to periodically because of the outstanding acting performances. The satirical take on mental health that Jennifer Lawrence and Bradley Cooper display is so entertaining, and the story between them is hilarious and charming. One of David O. Russell's best. 

After a brief stint at a mental hospital, Pat Solitano (Bradley Cooper) is released and sent to live back in Philadelphia with his parents (Robert De Niro and Jacki Weaver). After beating up the lover of his ex-wife Nicky, which is ultimately what led Pat to the psych ward with a diagnosis of bipolar disorder, he is set on a new path of healthy living and silver linings, and he is determined to win back Nicky. Along the way, Pat meets the mysterious and sexy, Tiffany (Jennifer Lawrence) and things are never the same after that.

This film is heavily driven by the acting performances. The former Hunger Games heroine Jennifer Lawrence, delivers the role of a lifetime. She's foulmouthed, sexy, rude, blunt, sensitive, vulnerable and a little slutty but she likes that part of herself (not a judgment, just a reference from the movie). Lawrence somehow portrays all these emotions in every scene, sometimes in every sentence Tiffany speaks. This was one of the most deserved Oscar wins of all time. Cooper plays a damaged guy suffering from bipolar who is largely driven by his lust for love and forgiveness from his ex-wife. His performance is raw and funny, but Lawrence steals the show. De Niro and Weaver deliver strong supporting performances as Pat's parents.

Only in Hollywood can mental illness be cured by the depths of this endearing romance between two broken souls. Russell sets a new bar for romantic comedies to rise to with this flick.

9/10

Wednesday, April 3, 2019

Joy (2015)


Directed by David O. Russell 

Screenplay written by David O. Russell 

Story by David O. Russell and Annie Mumolo

Starring Jennifer Lawrence, Robert De Niro, Bradley Cooper and Edgar Ramirez 











I have to start this review off with a brief disclaimer that I am extremely bias to anything starring Jennifer Lawrence, as she is one of my favorite actresses. Normally I wouldn't be drawn to a movie about a woman and the mop she invented-- but with Lawrence in the starring role, a supporting role from De Niro and David O. Russell in the directors chair again, what could go wrong? 

Joy is the real like story of Joy Mangano (although her last name is never actually mentioned in the movie). Joy (Jennifer Lawrence) is a mother of two, striving to make ends meet and keep her family together. She lives in a crowded house with her Mimi who has always encouraged the creative side of her; her mother (played by Virginia Madsen) who lies in bed all day watching soap operas; her ex-husband Tony (Edgar Ramirez) who is an aspiring Latino singer living in her basement; and their two kids. Add to the mix her father Rudy (Robert De Niro) who runs a failing garage with Joy's half sister Peggy. A garage in which Joy also runs the books for. With all the challenges in her life, Joy decides to follow her dreams and be the powerful matriarch and inventor that her grandmother always knew she would be-- by inventing a revolutionary new mop. 

The story of Joy rising to become this powerful business women and QVC Queen is very endearing to watch. Some people may criticize that the script focuses way too heavily on this dysfunctional family dynamic and less on the growth of Joy's business. While the dynamic of this chaotic family may overshadow the story of her entrepreneurship-- that's what makes the movie so entertaining. Would the audience really be as engaged if Russell had eliminated scenes with the constant one-upmanship between Joy and her sister and replaced them with more scenes with Bradley Cooper's one-dimensional character, in a board room or something? It's necessary to include the dysfunctional family scenes because it is what ultimately plunged Joy to success and made for more entertainment for the movie-goer. 

This film is dominated by Jennifer Lawrence's acting, and that is not just personal bias (okay, maybe a little). She gives a very strong performance as this business tycoon and matriarchal bad-ass. I will always like Robert De Niro and I would never speak ill of his performance, but I felt some deja vu with his character in Joy.  I don't know if its just in Russell's films or in general but I feel like I have seen him play this character before.  Bradley Cooper plays some sort of business guy who is high-up in QVC and ultimately holds Joy's fate in his hands on wether or not her product gets sold on the show. His character though is pretty lifeless in this movie. After the Lawrence/Cooper combo in movies like Silver Linings Playbook and American Hustle, I think we were all excited for a resurgence of the pair. This time around though, it was all Lawrence and no Cooper contributing to the acting performances.

Joy may not be the best work we've seen from David O. Russell, but it had a heartwarming story to tell during a Christmas release which is the perfect mood and timing of year for this movie. If Joy had been released earlier in the awards season-- say October-- then it would have been easily forgotten. 

7/10