View all comments (1) - Comment on this review
Love Liza Movie Review
Love Liza Review

"Love Liza" Overview

Rating: R
2002
Cast and Crew
Director : Todd LouisoProducer : Ruth Charny,Jeff Roda
Screenwiter : Gordy Hoffman
Starring : Philip Seymour Hoffman,Kathy Bates,Steven Tobolowsky,JD Walsh,Jimmy Raskin
Philip Seymour Hoffman is a great actor. I have loved his work ever since his
repressed, awkward nurse-man in Boogie Nights. However, this type of awkward
and odd guy seems to the only role he plays. What would be a real stretch for
Hoffman’s magnificent acting abilities would be to play an average, everyday
Joe. But somehow, I imagine, that too would come across as eccentric and
idiosyncratic. In his latest role in Love Liza, Hoffman plays a troubled and
tender widower, attempting to reorient his life in the face of his wife’s
suicide and the letter she left behind. This role, then, is a bit different,
if only because Hoffman appeared at one point to have been an average, everyday
man: successful web designer and loving husband. However, the movie doesn’t
begin until after his wife’s death and thus follows his mental breakdown and
journey to oddville, which really for Hoffman is just a return to normality.
Gordy Hoffman’s script, awarded best screenplay at Sundance 2002, offers little
more in terms of plot. Rather I would characterize the developments of the
script as taking place in well-defined and highly differentiated moments. Of
course, they all flow together into a linear and cohesive story, but everything
about the film, from the writing and the direction down to the lighting and
music (a nice score by Jim O’Rourke) maintains a kind of individualization of
scenes. These key scenes build like motifs defined by their content.
The unopened letter that Wilson's (Hoffman) wife left behind for him remains
the main visual and thematic element structuring the film. The letter is the
only real unresolved issue, because it has the potential to change everything
Wilson thought about himself and his wife. The letter is also the only thing
that binds Wilson’s mother-in-law (Kathy Bates) to the film’s development.
However there are other elements are almost as poignant. For instance, in
order to cope with the aftermath, Wilson develops a gas sniffing habit, which
also leads to an RC hobby (so that he can have gas around). The first time he
sniffs gas, the scene lingers on Wilson’s face as it fades out of focus and the
kitchen lights create an outline of his face in a glowing orange hue. As his
habit progresses, so does the ways in which the film depicts it: Wilson’s fuzzy
vision and dulled wit, or a rainy street as seen through the windshield of his
car. We understand what is happening, but never because of overstuffed visual
motifs. Wilson’s foray into the “extreme” world of RC rallies, also, plays
wonderfully and provides the film (and Wilson) just the right amount of comic
relief. In this respect, the direction and the script are wonderful. They
never beat you over the head with the scene's intended meaning. Rather they
give every scene its own feel that develops out the characters’ mood or
situation. It is the trope of American independent film, but Love Liza pulls
it off beautifully.
That said, having given first-time screenwriter and director (erstwhile actor
Todd Louiso of High Fidelity) his much due respect for an intriguing, if
simple, first film, Love Liza isn’t without its occasional snag. The writing,
while mostly realistic and casual, at times seems forced and trite. The
direction also doesn’t always help here, when at certain key points the
dramatic conflict and visual expressiveness become excessive. Even Hoffman
seems to go too far, too fast at some points, and Kathy Bates has too few
scenes to be stealing as many of them as she does. And while I do commend the
simple yet expressive visual stylings, they are occasionally overdone.
The content of the film is rather depressing, but the great acting and
well-written characters give the film a sense of overcoming, without the
typical facing-your-fears-and-returning-to-normal endgame, so common to
conventional plot progression. And while the writing, directing, and, yes,
even the acting can, at times, go a bit too far, the film’s simple approach to
its basic premise maintains an air of ease and relaxedness despite all the
tension, tears, and RC boats, cars, and planes. Certainly worth a peek, if not
for the debut work of a director and screenwriter, then at least to see more of
Hoffman’s great, even if typical, performance. And, if you need a final
resson, then see Love Liza because it manages to come in at just over 90
minutes (probably the shortest film this holiday season) and to say more than
most movies can in two hours-plus.
Loves hot dogs.
|
Review by Eric Vanstrom
|
I saw this movie because Philip Seymour Hoffman and Kathy Bates are consumate actors
and I looked forward to seeing them together. I also wanted to see it because I was
aware of the basic subject matter. I cannot help but wonder whether Gordy Hoffman
the writer had any personal knowledge of the very sensitive matter of familial suicide?
I am a real person who has survived the suicide of a family member and I assure you,
as I watched the character of Wilson there was little to no sense of reality or truth
. What a shame to waste two phenomenal character actors on this hollow script. Did
anyone think to ask real people what the first three weeks after a suicide is like?
I'm ready willing and able to fill in the blanks.
View all comments (1) - Comment on this review







