Posted in: by Robert Horton, Contributors, Film Reviews

Review: Maggie’s Plan

Maya Rudolph and Greta Gerwig

It’s possible that the author of Death of a Salesman might have fathered a child with a gift for the rapid-fire style of screwball comedy. But in her films as writer/director, Arthur Miller’s daughter has remained true to his somber mood. Rebecca Miller seems entirely at home in the heaviness of her 2005 drama The Ballad of Jack and Rose (which starred her husband, Daniel Day-Lewis, no laugh riot himself). And when hilarity breaks out in Miller’s Private Lives of Pippa Lee (2009), it’s like a desperate bark from someone drowning.

Miller’s new film, Maggie’s Plan, has the contours—and the far-fetched storyline—of a screwball comedy, and although it misses the happy rhythm of that ditzy film subgenre, it substitutes something intriguing.

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Posted in: by Robert Horton, Contributors, Film Reviews

Review: Sisters

Amy Poehler and Tina Fey

Sisters may not be much of a movie, but it is a party. In fact, more than half the film takes place during a wild, unhinged blowout. The hosts of this party-pretending-to-be-a-movie are Tina Fey and Amy Poehler, Saturday Night Live veterans and occasional awards-show emcees. Screenwriter Paula Pell’s sitcom premise—Fey and Poehler play sisters coming together to spend one last weekend in the childhood home their parents have just sold—allows the duo to vamp their way through a series of increasingly chaotic and eminently R-rated situations.

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