Feast of Love Movie Review
Feast of Love Review

"Feast of Love" Overview

Rating: R
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Robert BentonProducer : Marisa Forzano,Ted Gidlow,Gary Lucchesi,Lori McCreary,Tom Rosenberg
Screenwiter : Allison Burnett
Starring : Morgan Freeman,Selma Blair,Greg Kinnear,Radha Mitchell,Alexa Davalos,Toby Hemmingway,Billy Burke,Fred Ward,Jane Alexander
In Godard's Contempt, Michel Piccoli explains the depth of his love for
Brigitte Bardot as "totally... tenderly... tragically." The characters in
Robert Benton's autumnal meditation on the meaning of love, Feast of Love, all
dive into love with blinders on like Piccoli, drowning in their own respective
seas of love.
Bradley (Greg Kinnear) is an affable, eternally optimistic schlimazel who runs
Jitters, a tiny coffee shop in an Oregon college town, a guy that burbles out
statements like, "I think love is everything; the only meaning we have to this
crazy dream." Bradley is so likeable and easygoing that he is ripe to be
trampled upon by the love beast and he is. Twice. First, his wife Kathryn
(Selma Blair) leaves him for another woman. He then falls head over heels in
love with cool-drink-of-water real-estate agent Diana (Radha Mitchell), who
ends up marrying Bradley, despite her continuing to engage in carnal relations
with David (Billy Burke). Bradley relates his stretch of news from the lovelorn
to his friend Harry (Morgan Freeman), Harry calmly telling Bradley, "At least
this time it's with a guy."
Harry, on an extended leave from his position at the local college, is the
resident sage, sitting at his table in Jitters, sipping his brew, reading his
paper, and dispensing homilies like a Joe in The Time of Your Life -- words of
wisdom like "The end is always right there at the beginning" or "Sometimes you
don't know if you've crossed a line until you're already on the other side and,
of course, by then it's too late." And since Harry is played by Morgan Freeman,
Benton offers the by now obligatory Morgan Freeman voice over narration, like
Red in The Shawshank Redemption or Eddie in Million Dollar Baby. Clearly, Harry
is the soul of this tight-knit community. More than the soul.
For suddenly Oregon is in the land of Fate and the Greek Gods. Harry, with his
towering wife (Jane Alexander) seem to know and to predict the future of every
mere mortal in town; on a nightly tour they walk past the suburban homes and
click their tongues about the spurned, jilted, and rejected folks asleep in
their homes. But it is not just Harry and Esther; the town even has its own
oracle --a frumpy fortune-teller with Laurel and Hardy dolls who predicts doom
and gloom.
Harry not only consoles Bradley but also the beautiful and innocently young
waitstaff at Jitters, Oscar (Toby Hemmingway) and Chloe (Alexa Devalos), who,
just like Bradley, fall instantly, completely, and unthinkingly in love and are
even more doomed that he is.
Robert Benton revels in this mythic roundelay of the magic and mystery (and
ultimate extinction) of love, his camera lingering on knowing glances, offhand
gestures, and idealized lovemaking, in an attempt to portray the completely
illogical abandon that accompanies the head-smacking imbecility of love and
desire at first sight. But in concentrating on Harry's wry remarks and
passive-aggressive aid, Benton renders this sensual saturnalia as mere
background to Harry's distancing eye.
But this where Greg Kinnear comes in. Kinnear's Bradley is the heart of the
film. The character could have easily been turned into a joke but with Kinnear
in the role Bradley, despite all the tribulations heaped upon him, he becomes
the film's tower of strength and its emotional compass. Kinnear's glance
conveys a world of love lost and love gained. While Benton laboriously stirs
the pot of his New Age emotionalism, Kinnear delivers the goods. When Bradley
says, "I'm the happiest man alive," you believe it.
Love? Tastes like chicken.
Reviewer: Paul Brenner





