Tropic Cinema Has a Playbook Youâll Like
Reviewed by Shirrel Rhoades
Just as film critics are putting out their Top Ten Films of 2012 lists â" with âSilver Linings Playbookâ appearing on many of them â" those crazy-as-a-fox programmers at Tropic Cinema have booked, you guessed it, âSilver Linings Playbook.â
In this satisfying little movie written and directed by David O. Russell (âThe Fighter,â âI Heart Huckabeesâ), People Weeklyâs 2011 Sexiest Man Alive Bradley Cooper stars as a teacher whoâs been away at a mental institution due to his bipolar disorder, and now wants to get back together with his errant wife. But he meets ups with Jennifer Lawrence, who plays a wacky woman thrown for a loop by the recent death of her husband. Are these two dysfunctional souls a romance made in rom-com heaven? Itâs no spoiler to say, weâre rooting for them. And laughing along with their neurotic shenanigans.
For those of you who havenât seen it, Steven Spielbergâs âLincolnâ is still playing. A must-see film, Daniel Day-Lewis is a sure bet to get an Oscar node for his portrayal of Abraham Lincoln. Besides, you will find it fascinating, the political machinations behind the passage of the US Constitutional amendment that abolished slavery.
Movie buffs will want to catch âHitchcock,â the story behind the making of the Master of Suspenseâs horror masterpiece âPsycho.â That old saw about âthe woman behind the manâ holds true in this case, because youâll discover that Hitchâs wife Alma Reville was the muse that drove him to success, not those icy blondes he always sought for his movies.
Lighter fare is provided by âThe Guilt Trip,â the road comedy starring Barbra Streisand and Seth Rogen as a mother and son who go on an 8-day drive. Youâll wonder if either will survive as they bicker back and forth and milk the generation gap for all the Jewish-inspired laughs in it.
âChasing Iceâ is staying on, making us wish our ice caps had as much longevity. National Geo photographer James Balog set up time-lapse cameras to document the melting glaciers around the world. This six-year fast-forward view should erase any questions you have about the reality of climate change. Chilling, in both senses of the word.
And the pièce de résistance is âAny Day Now,â the bittersweet gay adoption film that was produced by five Key Westers (among others). And along with Alan Cumming and Garret Dillahunt, it includes performances by our own Anne OâShea (also an executive producer), Randy Roberts, and Randy Thompson. While Cummings gives the performance of his career, he still manages to get upstaged by real-life Down syndrome kid Isaac Leyva. You know what W.C. Fields said about thatâ¦.
Yep, itâs a good week to catch up on your movies.
srhoades@aol.com
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