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The
Royal Tenenbaums Movie Review:
From the writer/director of
semi-cult classics Bottle Rocket and Rushmore,
Wes Anderson brings his eccentric sensibility with the tale
of the Tenenbaums, a remarkably dysfunctional family whose
problems are beyond the scope of reasonable therapy. However,
despite a very promising start, The Royal Tenenbaums
dwells a bit too much on its idiosyncrasies, foregoing a
satisfying and engaging narrative.
Gene Hackman and Anjelica Huston are Royal and Etheline
Tenenbaums, a well to do couple with three children, Richie,
Margot and Chas. Richie is a highly promising tennis superstar,
who has won many junior championships and who will eventually
win major nationals. Margot is the adopted daughter, a brooding
lass who takes up the pen and paintbrush and receives a
fifty thousand dollar grant in the ninth grade. Chas is
the young entrepreneur of the family, well versed in litigations,
dispositions and repossessions.
Sounds like a rather good family brimming with child prodigies.
The Tenenbaums have covered pretty much all the criteria
that measure success sports, arts and finances, however,
the thread the holds this family together is rather thin.
With the separation of the Royal and Etheline, and with
the children peaking at their fields at a disappointingly
early age, the Tenenbaums are in a rut.
With years of letdowns, regrets and failures, the older
Tenenbaum kids (Richie Luke Wilson, Margot
Gwyneth Paltrow, Chas Ben Stiller) and a guilt-stricken
Royal find their way back home one way or another trying
to mend things between them all.
The Royal Tenenbaums would have been great as
a short film or if taken part by part instead of a whole.
Wes Anderson and co-writer Owen Wilson (who also plays the
Tenenbaum neighbor kid Eli) successfully creates sympathetic
characters, but they erroneously under develop them. The
movie was more intrigued with how odd these children were,
instead of focusing on their state of fragility, and consequently
my sympathies for them wore thin. Yes, I know they were
a bit on the stranger side of things, but I didnt
need to be reminded every time. In addition, love stories
were introduced, but they felt more strained and forced
rather than heartfelt. The relationship and supposed romance
between Margot and Richie didnt really pan out or
was fully explored. It seemed more to instill a sense of
the bizarre rather than to humanize them.
Tenenbaums has a great premise on the onset,
but doesnt quite take off. Halfway through the film,
I didnt feel like it was really going anywhere and
has lost its endearing quirkiness. The performances are
strong, however, anchored by veterans such as Anjelica Huston,
Danny Glover (as one of Ethelines suitors), and especially
Gene Hackman, as the despicable father who never forgets
to remind Margot that shes adopted, who openly favors
Ritchie, and who purposely gives Chas an embedded BB gun
pellet on his knuckle as a lesson about teamwork.
Anderson has a great knack with the camera and a good sense
of storytelling, and I know there better things will come
from him.
Just like Bottle Rocket and Rushmore,
Tenenbaums starts out promising, but falters
nevertheless (although Rushmore came the closest
in packing everything together just right). The dark humor,
the fancy editing and the all-star cast couldnt quite
salvage this movie from being dysfunctional itself.
Film is Rated R for some language, nudity and drug content.
Running time is 103 minutes.
2
1/2 out of 5
Mazzyboi
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The Royal Tenenbaums
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