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Maggie Gyllenhaal stars as a drug addicted mother of a young girl who has recently been paroled from prison, and is released to a half-way house in her hometown, and then attempts to become a "mother" to her young daughter. During her incarceration, which was three years, her daughter lived with Maggie's brother and sister-in-law, who do not have children.
The film clocks in at one and a half hours, and so it moves at a fairly brisk pace, considering the multitude of issues that the film weaves in the story, all of which the screenplay seamlessly weaves together. There is the issue of her continued sobriety, her need to obtain employment, to make her parole officer happy, her conflicts with her brother and sister, who are raising her child as their own, who do not want to loose the child, with Maggie and her brother, who is conflicted bewteen his sister and his wife. There is also the issue of her daughter who is being introduced to a mother she does not know.
Maggie Gyllenhaal turns in a spectacular performance. Because of the many variety of issues that her character confronts, he performance must range from being a tough, physical occupant of a halfway house, and conciliatory parolee, tender when trying to spend time with her daughter and convince her brother that she is clean, her attempts to remain clean, and her attitude that sometimes she must do what she can do to get a job she wants. She plays each of these roles convincingly.
I am a little familiar with drug addicts and former drug addicts as they go through and have gone through the system, loosing family and friends, only to try to get them back again, and she finds the perfect notes to express their frustrations, and the pull that their former lives have on them and where they want to go with their lives. We see and sense the conflict between her wanting to give in, and wanting to succeed for her daughter. We see the violence she is capable of, as well as the tenderness she is capable of. All without appearing she is acting. Sort of like a good speaker that does not tell us "Here is the bass, here is midrange, here is the treble." It all just blends together, but you know each of them is there, producing accurate music.
The screenplay and direction do not seek to make her a hero, or a beast, or scream for sympathy. I think a lot of productions would try to elicit sympathy, as though she is a victim of her circumstances, she needs a second chance, the beauty of the human soul, yada yada yada. This production seems to appreciate the reality that there is good and bad, and sometimes solutions are not easy as writing a happy ending. The ending is not happy. Or sad. Merely true, leaving us with the knowledge that while her train is slowed a little, it is not derailed, and there is still time to right the ship. We feel optimistic, but realize there are no free passes. Nor should there be.
Highly recommended. I have appreciated Maggie Gyllenhaal's willingness to take chances in her roles, and her risk of playing a very flawed, but, I think, decent person, should be rewarded.
Follow Ups:
Maggie was very good (too believable)
though the movie did not break any new ground
While there are many films which concentrate on the the addicted as they navigate (glorifying?) their drug use, those films feature the big name actors and sell tickets, there seem to be precious few films that concentrate on the drug addicted attempts at sobriety. I found that depiction unique.
Those that do show the drug addicted person trying to be sober usually show the sweats, showers, and other physical withdrawal from hard drugs. I am reminded of Heath Ledger's film 'Candy', a very good film, I thought, but one where the focus is on the addiction, itself. Sherrybaby, I think, is unique in that it is a practical film - a woman who wants to be sober for practical reasons - to avoid jail, and to keep her kid, but, otherwise, I do not think sobriety attracts her at all. If she could stay out of jail and keep her kid, and do drugs, she'd be snorting daily. Most films show the addicted as eventually hating themselves when they are on drugs, which then becomes their motive for kicking the habit. I surmise that Sherrybaby shows how most addicted people are before they have hit rock bottom. Without giving away the ending, I think that she has yet to hit rock bottom, and the flm is not afraid to tell us that, but also leaves hope that things will be better.
I also thought the role of the parole officer was very well written and acted.
I agree with your assessment and would add that it's a somewhat tough film to watch, such is Gyllenhaal's performance. Not that it isn't rewarding, it is, greatly, IMHO. Maggie just flat out nailed her character. And yes, nice cans.
Things are looking great
And they're only getting better
but for this type of film I think I prefered Down To The Bone with Vera Farmiga who's excellent in it. It felt more realisitic and the atmosphere the film creates helps you understand/feel how she could wind up in the position she winds up in.
"You can safely assume you have created God in your own image when he hates all the same people you do."
watch straight through. I have to trun it off when it hits too hard. SHE IS GOOD. Why did the announcer say the "late" Vera F. She ain't dead!!! Is this the same Down to the Bone that Shilts came from?? :-)
I have his CD, he's good. Met him, he's a jerk. But as Peter White told us when intorducing his special guest, Shilts, "Not bad for a boy from Luton".
did you ultimately like it?What about this compared to Sherrybaby (titties aside)?
"You can safely assume you have created God in your own image when he hates all the same people you do."
a
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No one regularly dropping 1000-word theses seriously can label anyone else, "self-important."
No one, that is, with even a tattered shred of introspection or self-awareness.
Your condition may well be the result of an over-attention to the personal injury film genre.
It can be cured by several viewings of, "Oldboy."
On acid.
Self importance is you providing an opinion, or snide comment, believing that you do not need to provide any support for your opinions, because, well, your opinions stand on their own. I prefer to provide some substance for my opinions.
Really, though, why do you bother to read them?
See.
You can do shorter.
Now, go work on the clever.
Next up, Jimmy defends the torture film genre.
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