Showing posts with label Maggie Smith. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Maggie Smith. Show all posts

Sunday, September 28, 2014

My Old Lady - Movie Review



MYOLDLADY
(2014 - September 10)
Comedy | Drama
1 hr. 47 min.

Rated: PG-13 |  For thematic material and some sexual references. Common Sense Media says: OK for 14+. Profanity is very sparing, which makes the words ("d--k," "s--t") have an even stronger impact when they're heard. There's also some kissing, off-screen sex, and casual/social drinking.
Grade: B-

Director: Israel Horovitz
Writers: Israel Horovitz (screenplay), Israel Horovitz (play)
Stars: Kevin Kline, Kristin Scott Thomas, Maggie Smith | See full cast and crew

Mathias Gold (Kevin Kline) is a down-on-his-luck New Yorker who inherits a Parisian apartment from his estranged father. But when he arrives in France to sell the vast domicile, he's shocked to discover a live-in tenant who is not prepared to budge.

His apartment is a viager — an ancient French real estate system with complex rules pertaining to its resale — and the feisty Englishwoman Mathilde Girard (Maggie Smith), who has lived in the apartment with her daughter Chloé (Kristin Scott Thomas) for many years, can by contract collect monthly payments from Mathias until her death.

With no place to go, Mathias strikes a tentative lodging arrangement with Mathilde, instantly clashing with suspicious, lovelorn Chloé over his private dealings with a rapacious property developer, who wants to purchase the apartment. An uneasy détente settles in as the quarreling Mathias and Chloé come to discover a common ground of childhood pain and neglect. As they draw increasingly closer, Mathilde unveils a complex labyrinth of secrets that unites the trio in unexpected ways.




Kevin Kline and the 79 year old Dame Maggie Smith star in this charming romance dramadey set in Paris. It is also Israel Horovitz' debut as filmmaker. At 75, Mr. Horovitz, is the  author of 70 stage plays. He took this one, popularly performed all over the world in many languages, and said to be his favorite and adapted it for the screen. He directed and his daughter Rachael Horovitz produced.
The first act is a bit slow as we get to know the characters but the strong performances make it worth the wait. This is Kevin Kline like he is rarely seen, dark, troubled and vulnerable. Maggie Smith is incredible as usual. She has the knack for delivering a line, getting the most out of what the author supplies to her.
Jim Gold (Kevin Kline) is an unsuccessful American writer, he has just arrived in Paris to collect his inheritance, an old two-story apartment with a large attached garden smack in the center of  the expensive Marais district. His plan is to sell the apartment for some quick much-needed cash and get out of town. However, Mathilde Girard (Maggie Smith) is a 90something little old Englishwoman who happens to be living in it along whit her daughter Chloé (Kristin Scott Thomas) who is irritable, defensive, unmarried and determined that Mom won’t be going anywhere, not any time soon anyway.

This is the setup for “My Old Lady,” a tale of troubled family histories, the clashing of Franco-American culture and arcane French real estate law.
Because of "viager", this French concept of what amounts to a reverse mortgage, Madame Girard is grandmothered into the apartment, that Jim Gold has inherited from his estranged father whom he hadn’t seen in decades. He shows up to check out and sell his property and there she is — immovable because of the “viager.” He owns the property, but only after she dies. The reverse annuity contract means that not only can he not sell the property but he has to pay rent to her, as well. It’s all in his dad’s will.
 
“I own this apartment,” mutters Jim, whom Madame Girard insists on calling 'Mathias',..."And I own…you?”
Jim was born in Paris but left when his parents split up. He is now 57, has no job, no money and is the owner of a property he can do nothing with, at least not until his 'old lady' dies. What’s more, she insists on getting her 2,400 Euros rent. 
"That’s a nice watch there, Mathias". She says, implying that she will accept it as payment for the first month. 
"It's gold."
“You’re a pirate, Madame Girard!”
“How do you get to be 57 and 11 months and have so little to show for it?” She asks.
The third act becomes a bit muddy as Horovitz attempts to add mystery where it is unnecessary. All in all it's a good film that should have been a great film, a bit disappointing considering the talented cast, but the performances alone are worth the time.

CAST
  Dame Maggie Smith              Kevin Kline             Kristin Scott Thomas  
Mathilde Girard              Mathias Gold                   Chloé Girard  

Monday, June 11, 2012

The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel - Review

The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel
For the Elderly and Beautiful
is Most Excellent, Yes Absolutely, Most Assuredly So!
 
The Best
Exotic Marigold Hotel
PG-13
Some sexual dialogue
Run time: 2 hr. 3 min.
Drama, Comedy
Rating: A-
Director:
John Madden
Writer:
Stars:
Dev Patel 

The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel follows a group of seven British retirees who decide to "outsource" their retirement to less expensive and seemingly exotic India. Enticed by advertisements for the newly restored Marigold Hotel and bolstered with visions of a life of leisure, they arrive to find the palace a shell of its former self. Though the new environment is less luxurious than imagined, they are forever transformed by their shared experiences, discovering that life and love can begin again when you let go of the past.
Haven't seen The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel yet? Well somebody has been going to see it. I'm sorry it took me so long to see it. Since the film opened on May 4, it continues to do well at the box office, even in light of  slew of big-budget blockbusters Men in Black 3, Battleship, The Avengers that have come along since then. Marigold’s popularity might be credited to John Madden, who also directed Shakespeare in Love, and to its 24-karat gold cast, including Judi Dench, Maggie Smith, Tom Wilkinson and Bill Nighy, all of them over 60. Bbased on the  Deborah Moggach novel, These Foolish Things, about a group of English oldsters who move to a retirement hotel in India. The movie’s reception is proof that there’s a market for movies out there about people who aren’t young and beautiful, just interesting—as are the characters in Marigold. Just ordinary people coping the with end-of-life transitions in a drastically foreign place. The potency of the perennially ill-served older audience has once again been demonstrated.
Imagine in the distant (or not so distant) future, you retire to a warm climate, enjoy a colorful land and best of all, affordable living in a retirement resort. The concept is sold to several retirees from Britain. Little do they know the advertised Best Exotic Marigold Hotel for the Elderly and Beautiful is a run-down establishment of faded glory. The place is Jaipur, India. 
 Outsourcing old age, that’s the idea of  Hotel owner Sonny Kapoor (Dev Patel of Slumdog Millionaire) who has inherited the property from his late father. His mother is insistence that he close the failing hotel down and return with her to  Delhi and marry the girl of her choice, but Sonny is determined to make it on his own. He has already picked out his girl, and is positive about his plan to outsource retirement, and why not India has already become the successful home of outsourcing of so many other services.

Featurettes
 
Evelyn 
Check in
You Tried Jiggling It A Bit
Norman Nods Off
The previews don’t do justice to the movie. When I first saw them, I wondered…why would such a top-notch cast of veteran British actors sign on to what seems to be a shallow and silly farce? However, after seeing the movie, my guess would be: they envisioned what fun it would be to make this, film and sensed the thematic relevance as well. So, why would I go see this film if I was so underwhelmed by the trailer? I just couldn’t resist the combined star power and my confidence that their judgment saw something I wasn't seeing--plus, I'd go see almost anything with Maggie Smith--and where can you see this many high caliber actors together on one big screen?

The guests are Evelyn (Judi Dench), dependent upon her husband all of her married life is now recently widowed. She decides to take charge of her life; Muriel (Maggie Smith), an acerbic  xenophobic racist who won’t eat anything she can’t pronounce (brought back memories of her stellar performance in Death On The Nile as Bette Davis' domestic servant), needs a hip replacement and the socialized National Health will put her on a 9 month to a year wait list for the surgery, her Indian surgeon suggest she can get the surgery cheaper and almost immediately in India; Douglas and Jean (Bill Nighy and Penelope Wilton), are an incompatible couple who have stayed together out of habit and loyalty; Graham (Tom Wilkinson),  a judge following his heart returns to his former home to look for a long-lost friend; Madge (Celia Imrie), still single and still after retirement, looking for Mr. Right; and Norman (Ronald Pickup), a horny old goat who seemingly knows exactly what he wants.
The humor comes naturally and unforced, the dialogue is witty and refreshing, something that is not easily found in comedies out of Hollywood. This charming cast of veteran actors exude a sense of seriousness in their performances, authenticating their characters which makes their simple storylines convincing.

Oscar nominated director John Madden (Shakespeare In Love,1998) has done a fine job knitting together the on-screen chemistry of his cast. Their camaraderie as fellow travellers from the UK and as guests in the Marigold Hotel make the characters appealing and interesting. Each and every  storyline is intriguing right from the onset of the film, They draw you into each of their lives while they are still in England and you expectantly join them on their journey to India, open and ready to experience the unfolding of events.
 
Typical of all ‘exotic’ movies, there are cultural features that can easily lead to stereotyping and patronizing. Unexpectedly, these ‘typical’ portrayals are few and mostly restrained. The film was shot right in Udaipur, India. I saw Marigold Hotel with a 96 year old, I didn't expect too much of this film and was therefore very pleasantly surprised. We both enjoyed this film, it is simply delightful, one that you might not mind watching again.

Cast:



Tom Wilkinson
Graham Dashwood


Maggie Smith
Muriel Donnelly


Judi Dench
Evelyn Greenslade


Bill Nighy
Douglas Ainslie


Dev Patel
Sonny Kapoor
John Madden gives direction to Judi Dench.
Below, scenes form behind the camera.