We take it in turns to propose the films that we screen and then the rest of the committee gives its consent - sort of. The only definite rule is that someone has to have seen the film...
I'd not seen this film, although what I'd read made me add it to my "interesting film to see sometime" mental list, and so was looking forward to the screening.
The whole cast gave good performance, and I can see why the ensemble got such good reviews, but somehow the whole film was less than the sum of its parts. the film was based on a successful stage play and that came across in the adaptation: a series of set pieces set in and around the family house with no opportunity to broaden the location. I'm not sure if a better director could have handled it better, although I think the structure of the screenplay added this constraint.
It was good to see for the performances, but it's definitely not a classic and not one that I'd like to watch again.
Here are my notes
August: Osage County
Here's a link to the trailer:
I'd not seen this film, although what I'd read made me add it to my "interesting film to see sometime" mental list, and so was looking forward to the screening.
The whole cast gave good performance, and I can see why the ensemble got such good reviews, but somehow the whole film was less than the sum of its parts. the film was based on a successful stage play and that came across in the adaptation: a series of set pieces set in and around the family house with no opportunity to broaden the location. I'm not sure if a better director could have handled it better, although I think the structure of the screenplay added this constraint.
It was good to see for the performances, but it's definitely not a classic and not one that I'd like to watch again.
Here are my notes
August: Osage County
USA 2013 121 minutes
Director: John Wells
Starring: Meryl Streep, Julia Roberts, Ewan
McGregor, Chris Cooper, Abigail Breslin and Benedict Cumberbatch
Awards and Nominations
- Oscar
nominations for Best Actress (Meryl Streep) and Best Supporting Actress
(Julia Roberts)
- BAFTA
nomination for Best Supporting Actress (Julia Roberts)
- A
further 15 wins and 61 nominations
“…Wells's
adaptation is notable primarily for its A-list ensemble cast, all of whom
relish the chance to sink their teeth into Letts's bilious dialogue. Top of the
heap is Meryl Streep,
as the poisonous (and poisoned) matriarch Violet Weston, whose scattered clan
descend upon her godforsaken home when her alcoholic poet husband mysteriously
goes missing. It turns out he's the lucky one; after a few days of incestuous
infighting and bloody backstabbing, it's easy to see why anyone trapped in this
domestic hell-hole would rather drown themselves than sit down to family
dinner.”
Mark
Kermode
The film is an
adaptation by Tracy Letts of his Pulitzer Prize winning play of the same which
ran on Broadway for over a year and was also staged briefly at the National
Theatre in London. The film reduces the running time of the play by about an
hour, which results in the adaptation offering a series of theatrical set
pieces rather than opening the story out by rethinking the play in cinematic
terms. Nonetheless the A-list ensemble cast work well together, with particular
praise being given to Meryl Streep as the matriarch and Julia Roberts as her
daughter who while being the only person strong enough to face her is terrified
of turning into her.
Letts trained as an
actor but has also made his name as a writer for both stage and screen: two of
his earlier plays have been successfully filmed from his own screenplays and a
third has been adapted into a TV series. As a TV actor he played a supporting
role in two seasons of Homeland as well
as appearing in minor roles in many other programmes, while as a stage actor he
has appeared in many US productions, with his most notable role being George,
in a production of Who’s Afraid of
Virginia Woolf on Broadway, for which he received the Tony Award for Best
Actor.
John Wells made his
name as executive producer and showrunner of a number of high profile US TV
series including ER, The West Wing, and Shameless. He made his debut as a director of feature films with The Company of Men (2010) for which he
also wrote the screenplay. He subsequently produced and co-wrote the screenplay
for Love & Mercy (2014), a
biographical drama about the Beach Boys, and has since directed Burnt (2016) a drama about a chef which
despite its award-winning cast received mixed reviews.