You
Can Count On Me Movie Review:
"You
Can Count on Me" is a movie about individuals struggling
for answers at the outset and who still struggle for answers
at the conclusion, yet we love them all the more for it.
Set
in the small, fictitious Catskill town of Scottsville, New
York (the real Scottsville sits just south of Rochester),
the story centers around a hard-working single mom named
Samantha Prescott (Laura Linney), who has a habit of mothering
not only her eight year-old son, Rudy (Rory Culkin) but
anyone for whom she holds a certain degree of sympathy.
Orphaned at a young age when her parents were killed in
an automobile accident, Sammy lives a very dedicated, meticulous
life on the outside but seems to have problems sorting out
the emotional debris swirling around on the inside. Her
brother, Terry (Mark Ruffalo) is the opposite. He leads
a nomadic life, often marred by bouts of anger and the lack
of a lucid life direction. When Terry comes home to borrow
money, an unforseen circumstance forces him to stay longer
than anticipated. Sammy and Terry's genuine familial love
enables them to stay close despite the differing views and
approaches to their own respective lives. Eventually, those
differences put the relationship onto a very tenuous line,
forcing each into the realization that the answers they
seek are never easily obtained.
The
film was written and directed by Kenneth Lonergan, a veteran
writer who co-authored the screenplay for Harold Ramis'
"Analyze This." He has created a gem of a movie, fairly
simple in terms of plot but more complex with regards to
observation of character. It's about people with complicated
emotions but relatively simple answers to justify the circumstances
in which they find themselves. As opposed to discovering
solutions, the characters ultimately come to the conclusion
that they simply don't have all the answers; a notion that
can be both unsettling and peaceful at the same time.
The
screenplay contains dialogue that is abundantly funny, unquestionably
real, and subtly perceptive all at once. I liked the scene
when Sammy and Terry first sit down to eat upon his arrival.
She asks how he is, to which he evasively shrugs his shoulders.
He asks how his nephew is doing. "We're fine." she replies
in a manner that distinctively accentuates the period at
the end of that sentence. We see from this exchange how
the "roles" they've become accustomed to playing can interfere
with their own ability to reach out; Sammy as the overprotective
sibling, Terry as the shiftless little brother. I also enjoyed
the exchanges between Sammy and her church's priest. Feeling
a need to be chastised, Sammy confesses to him some of her
sins, most notably the ongoing affair with her married boss.
However, the priest isn't a judgmental man, but a very compassionate
soul eager to help people through the most difficult times.
"What's the church's position on infidelity these days?"
Sammy inquires. "Shouldn't you tell me I'm a bad person
who'll rot in the flames of hell for eternity or something?"
He answers with a simple "well," a very humorous lilt in
his voice. "Why do you think you're in the situation you're
in?" he subsequently asks, his need to offer assistance
greatly outweighing any need to judge.
This
is Laura Linney's best role to date. Having appeared in
several films including "Primal Fear", "Congo", and as Jim
Carrey's phony television wife in "The Truman Show", she
brilliantly plays up the humorous elements of Lonergan's
dialogue while simultaneously conveying her character's
unsettling insecurity building beneath the surface. Accomplished
stage actor Mark Ruffalo is equally effective as an aimless
soul who somehow remains consistently lovable. The interactions
between Terry and his nephew are the most revealing, showing
his inability to behave responsibly as a guardian. Terry's
responses to the world around him are at times more juvenile
than an eight year-old.
Unlike
conventional storytelling, there doesn't exist a beginning,
middle, and an end here. Instead, what eminates from the
screen is a simple slice of life. The movie's best moment
comes when Sammy and Terry share a moment on a lonely park
bench. The traits that define them haven't changed much,
but the realization strikes that the lives they'd perhaps
hoped for will unfortunately continue to elude them. A sad
notion, but familiar to anyone who has loved someone they
didn't completely understand. While many films battle to
gain the attention of the viewer, "You Can Count on Me"
successfully taps into the deepest longings of the human
condition.
Copyright
2001
Michael Brendan McLarney
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