Skip to content

tMF | The MOVIE FANATIC

ALL ABOUT TWILIGHT

tMF has come up with a Comprehensive Guide to Twilight: Part 1 is all about the author, the story & the characters and the best Twilight sites, Part 2 is all about controversial Twilight issues and the Last Part is about Fan fiction & international fansites.

FANSITE OF THE MONTH

tMF salutes Ice Cream Man and Rupert Grint!

Definitely one of the best fansites on the net, ICM features the one of a kind talent of Rupert Grint! Read our exclusive interview and visit Ice Cream Man here!

2008 Fall/Winter Movie Preview

It all started with Harry Potter. As soon as Warner Bros. announced they were moving their tentpole holiday release to next summer, rival studios scrambled to take advantage of the hole left in the remaining 2008 release schedule. [ read more ]

HOME arrow Movie Reviews arrow MOVIE REVIEW: Rachel Getting Married
MOVIE REVIEW: Rachel Getting Married Print E-mail
Written by David DiMichele   
Tuesday, 28 October 2008

Starring: Anne Hathaway, Rosemarie DeWitt, Bill Irwin, Debra Winger
Director: Jonathan Demme
Release Date: October 3, 2008 (Limited)
Running Time: 114 min
MPAA Rating: R
Distributor: Sony Picture Classics

- - -

A rollercoaster usually doesn’t last long. You’re guaranteed to get thrills and those butterflies that float around inside the stomach as you fly down the dips. You try and take it all in but it’s useless because it goes by all too quickly. But you still try anyway because you know you only have the given moment. A Connecticut home, full of people with different backgrounds and ethnicities, housing a wedding and the receptions that come with it, finds itself on the tracks of a rollercoaster that has the possibility of being derailed. With that in mind, each person present at this party tries real hard to enjoy the moment that’s full of music, family traditions and love. One character in particular, the bride, doesn’t realize all that was in front of her until the wedding has now become something of the past. By the time the end credits roll along she reminded me of Michael Corleone, the distraught human soul, at the end of Godfather Part II.

What makes a family useful is its ability to caress and refurbish painful predicaments and decaying wrongs. Director Jonathan Demme’s portrait of a young woman dealing with the pain that comes along with being human is intriguing because she goes through life having to deal with being supervised all the time and her fragile emotions are constantly picked at such a nagging pace by family members, whose affections she would have rather greeted instead. This is Demme's forte; fascination with the social outcast. We've seen that worked to perfection in his greatest film, "Silence of the Lambs."

The young woman is Kym (Anne Hathaway) and she’s been released from a rehab center. She has been in and out for ten years and results are visible. She gets the opportunity to be in attendance at her sister Rachel’s wedding at their father’s home. Kym returns home to find a celebration in the making, not for her return, but for the wedding which will be a wedding that hasn’t been captured before on celluloid. What her return home does is serve her a reminder of her haunted memories, and minor indications of a brighter future. Hathaway manages to wipe away the sexiness and beauty that layered her face in previous films in order to replace it with a pale and skinny face that is searching for a soul. Her tour-de-force performance steers the movie away from melodrama and towards a near classical narrative.

- - -

- - -

The Connecticut home is bursting with energy. A homey estate that belongs to a family of disconnected souls. It homes a dysfunctional child trying to cope with her personal struggles, Kym, and a child who abides by the everyday rules. The abiding child is named Rachel (Rosemarie DeWitt) and she’s getting married to Sydney (Tunde Adebimpe), an African American musical guru who has a face that announces redemption. The bride and groom’s families couldn’t be more different when it comes to appearances and traditions. Demme goes for the unnatural approach by not focusing on the interracial marriage. He doesn’t even give the slightest hint at it, scoffing it off for a lesser director to approach such a cliché. This results in the film being more truthful than it plans to be. More truth is found in this technique than the handheld device Demme uses to track each member of the family. Yet it’s with the shaky camera that he uses to distract us from the interracial marriage. His movement from room to room, person to person is Altamnesque. Every character the lens focuses on is worth listening to. The reception dinner is a perfect example of this. No matter who is doing the talking we can’t help but to only be lulled along like we have known these people for the most part of our lives.

This wedding, so unorthodox and elaborate, mounts to form an isolated island around Rachel. Constantly yelling and harassing her sister for her entire stay, the father (Bill Irwin), a weak man who may take the tragic past harder than anyone in the family, finds himself in the middle of an ongoing sibling rival that recalls to mind The Prodigal Son tale. If his soul isn’t being gnawed at by the past, it’s certainly gnawing at his divorce from his first wife Abby (Debra Winger). She’s a firecracker waiting to be ignited so she can showcase her explosions and vent steam.

If there’s a flaw in Demme’s film, and there is, it’s contained within the characters of the two sisters, Rachel and Kym. Though each actress, Hathaway and DeWitt, give great performances, their characters are focused too much on arguing with each other. It almost gets to the point that as we watch the movie we become familiar and comfortable with the families in it, and then it clicks; it seems as if the audience is being used. Just as we nestle up real snuggly to the family and feel welcomed, most of the characters then begin to spill their guts out to us. Almost as if they use the audience as a ploy in order to unleash their furies and dilemmas. We’re the lucky psychiatrist who has the fortune of listening to some real rubbish and even some entertaining stories by patients who are basket-cases.

Film Rating: *** out of ****

Official [ Movie Site ]

Comments (1)

Subscribe to this comment's feed
Rachel Getting Married HYPE
I think Anne hathaway is a seriously charming and talented actor. The film had a great story even if it has been written before.

I Hyped Rachel Getting Married on Everhype and gave it 89% which I think is fairly accurate.

http://www.everhype.com/hyper/mikeborgia?X=M766

I wouldn’t mind getting some opinions on it . If you get on there, rate me a 5 & request friendship.
musichyper , December 02, 2008 | url

Write comment

smaller | bigger

busy
 
< Prev   Next >


Login to tMF






Lost Password?
No account yet? Register

Notes on becoming a member

tMF offers membership for free! Please note that some hotmail, yahoo & AOL users may encounter problem with registration. If you cannot access this site or have a question, please use this form to contact the tMF Admin or use this email: modelwatcher [at] gmail.com.


Young Actors Series

Top 10 Young Actors with the most anticipated roles!
The New Invasion of Hollywood!
Hottest Teen Actors right this minute!
A Tale of 3 Young British Actors!
Tale of 2 Young French Actors!
Next Hollywood Leading Men!

BLOG OF THE MONTH

Every month tMF will pick one blog to be featured as Blog of the Month.

Screenwriting for Hollywood is that unique blog that is filled with so many interesting and wonderful articles. What a perfect description from the blog's owner, Jaden: "Raw, sexy, sassy articles explore screenwriting, Hollywood, and life. The SfH website and services are geared to help people sell screenplays to Hollywood, while also encouraging an independent positive spirit."

If you own a blog or a site about movies and actors, be our guest! Tell us more about it!

Blog Essentials

Add to Technorati Favorites

StumbleUpon

Find the best blogs at Blogs.com.

My Zimbio

Movies

Blog Flux Directory

Free Blog Directory

DigNow.org

Blogarama - The Blog Directory


JOIN THE LAMB!

Large Association of Movie Blogs

tMF is part of this exciting group of movie blogs! Visit the LAMB and join!

The Large Association of Movie Blogs has arrived on the scene, and is intended for all audiences.

For movie blog readers: rather than hunting through Google or through any number of blog directories and/or blogrolls looking for a site that fits your liking, this is your one-stop shop. Read up on the latest sites: who's behind them, what their focus is, their goals and what you can expect when visiting.

For movie bloggers: this is a place for your blog to be spotlighted, in its own feature post, for all to see. Additionally, the LAMB is a community of film bloggers, some like you and proably some totally unlike you. We regularly have events and blog-a-thons, from our LAMB Devours the Oscars series to Plot Farms to our annual awards, The LAMMYS.

FOCUS ON EMERGING TALENTS

tMF (The Movie Fanatic) is focused in providing the latest news about cinema's emerging talents. We feature interviews and profiles of mainly up-and-coming young actors in our Spotlight, Emerging Talents and On the Verge sections.

SUBSCRIBE TO TMF!

Lijit Search

LATEST COMMENTS

MOVIE REVIEW: Valkyrie
Valkyrie is that last movie I saw it was the best movie I seen for some time. I ...
MOVIE REVIEW: Gran Torino
This movie deeply haunts some men of my generation in so many ways .... and it s...
RECLAIM YOUR BRAIN: Down with the Idiot ...
I am positive he's not gay...He is really hot though, lika perfect 10..
MAKING WAVES! Zac Efron and Aaron Johnso...
hi everybody they r both pretyy hot but Aaron is way hottersmiley
tMF TOP PICKS: New on DVD - 'Pineapple E...
I agree and Pineapple Epxress is not as good as Tropic Thunder but still pretty ...

FANSITES GALORE!

tMF salutes the coolest fansites on the net!

The Movie-Fanatic is launching a new feature that will put the spotlight on the best fansites on the net! As you may have noticed by now, tMF is especially into 'emerging talents', the next stars and we're searching for the best sites that promote these actors and actresses. If you know of a site worthy of this recognition, please let us know!