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Wednesday, February 17th, 2010
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Movie Title: Lymelife
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I expected a amusing comedy, the DVD cloak art says, ‘Violently Amusing,’ ‘Laugh Out Loud Comic, racy and lively,’ ‘Wonderful,’ and ‘Tender.’ The film inside isn’t exactly any of these things. It is a coming of age film space in 1979 with the backdrop of some incredibly dysfunctional adults. No, I’m sorry; I laughed a exiguous at the beginning, but then was impartial left sunless after the half plan point passed.

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The film starts off quirky and spicy. I like film that tries current things, sets up a different style, hides things from the viewer, and uses unique music. All there in a fabulous mix during the first 30 minutes. At first I couldn’t residence the setting year (later in the film I discovered it is 1979, shown in a very pointed manner), so that was a bit unsettling. Two different families are shown and their relationship is unveiled slowly and wonderfully. There are a number of jokes that are genuinely laughable. At about midpoint the film starts to devolve into lies, cheating, substandard language, standard melodrama editing and filming, and the characters honest become less and less believable and lose my connection with them (do the two lead characters, best friends Adrianna and Scott) .

Sadly as this film lost my interest, I started to survey horribly sloppy editing and continuity. Normally these things objective pass by, I devour a film, I’m engrossed in the yarn, and continuity, unless grossly poor, fair slips past. Not here, the anecdote line got so bogged down that I started noticing all these problems. I noticed plan too many cuts where somebody would have their hand up to their mouth and an immediate reverse crop with their hand down; cigarettes that change length immediately; or facial expressions that change too fleet during a carve.

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The cast. Rory Culkin (yes he has a illustrious brother) as Scott was fine, as a more or less clueless teenager. Emma Roberts (Nancy Drew) as Adrianna was resplendent, and did a extraordinary job - objective snotty enough to her best friend Scott, and then impartial exactly nice enough. Alec Baldwin as Scott’s father, was a pig, sparkling distinguished as he always plays - he was a mix of Schwetty from SNL and his 30 Rock character. Jill Hennessy (Law and Order, and Crossing Jordan) as Scott’s mother was decent. She was a exiguous bit crazy, a puny bit caring mother. Cynthia Nixon Adrianna’s mother (Sex and the City) was sometimes extraordinary, sometimes honest terrible - her Unusual York accent slipped in and out a lot. Timothy Hutton as Adrianna’s father was unprejudiced so dirty - looked like he never washed his hair the whole time. Bottom line, its more or less an all star cast. There wasn’t a lot of chemistry between these characters, except Scott and Adrianna.

The film was too long by a beneficial 30 minutes. The first 30 minutes were kindly. The last 15 were very well done. There was 45 minutes where the film kind of lost its diagram.

The film is rated R. There are sensuous moments with no nudity; a pleasing amount of strong language; and s limited amount of violence. This film might be acceptable for slightly younger viewers. The themes are somewhat stale.

The DVD includes a fairly long list of bonus features. The alternate ending is fair tedious abominable. I’ve never seen a DVD where the alternate is 19 minutes, where 18 minutes was exactly the same as the unique film. There is 20 seconds that is recent or different. The divulge over with the director and a few others is objective insensible annoying. Clearly the director loved the script written version that is the alternate. Frankly, this is a ample extinguish of time, the released ending is exactly the lawful ending. There are a series of deleted scenes. Again, I had a hard time seeing what is different, other than extensions of what was included in the released film.

I was disappointed by this film. There are remarkable better coming of age films. Adventureland, Sever & Norah’s Infinite Playlist, and Almost Distinguished reach to mind. My expectations were maybe status too high, this is a coming of age film with a depressing abet sage.

I admit that I picked this for viewing because of Alec Baldwin. The guy may have had his shares of troubles but he is quite a charismatic actor (well, in some movies more than others) . Situation in Long Island, N.Y., the time period is the mid-70s, and it also has two Culkin brothers in it. Rory Culkin portrays a 15-year-old, Scott Bartlett whose parents,sincere estate developer Mickey (Alec Baldwin in a wolfish and arrogant role) and passive mother, Brenda (Jill Hennessy) think the trappings of a successful life, but are not altogether glad in their marriage. Scott is however more concerned with the girl next door, beautiful Adrianna (Emma Roberts of Nancy Drew) who sort of teases him, but has other romantic inclinations. Adrianna’ mom, Melissa (Cynthia Nixon) works for Mickey, and portrays a long-suffering wife who has to deal with her Lyme-disease addled husband, Tommy (Timothy Hutton) . Oh, and there’s Scott’s brother Jimmy (Kieran Culkin), who’s on leave from the army.

The drama of the two families unfolds slowly, portraying the slack unraveling of two marriages, whilst also delving into the sexual awakening of an adolescent boy who is tormented by his attraction to Adrianna, and also concerned about his parents’ marriage. Rory Culkin does a credible job of playing the angsty teen, and grows on the viewer, eliciting one’s empathy for the growing inconvenience he goes through, without being overly melodramatic or sentimental. There’s a excellent balance between the dusky and light in this drama, and the ensemble cast does a tall job in maintaining this balance, especially Alec Baldwin who plays factual to type here.

The chronicle is far from unusual or unusual,as there have been so many other movies made about dysfunctional families, and adolescence (one of my favorites is “The Squid and the Whale”) yet it strikes a chord, and this is largely due to the heartfelt performance by Rory Culkin. Another well-made coming-of-age movie is The Education of Charlie Banks.
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