Mrs. Doubtfire Movie Review
Mrs. Doubtfire Review
"Mrs. Doubtfire" Overview

Rating: PG-13
1993
Cast and Crew
Director : Chris ColumbusProducer : Mark Radcliffe,Marsha Garces Williams,Robin Williams
Screenwiter : Randi Mayem Singer,Leslie Dixon
Starring : Robin Williams,Sally Field,Pierce Brosnan,Lisa Jakub,Matthew Lawrence,Mara Wilson,Polly Holliday,Robert Prosky,Harvey Fierstein
What was the last Robin Williams comedy that anyone was excited about? Williams
wore out his welcome about the time he and pal Billy Crystal made the
unbearable Father's Day in 1997. About Williams in that movie, Robert Ebert
expressed it best: "He's getting to be like the goofy uncle who knows one corny
parlor trick and insists on performing it at every family gathering."
When Williams was good--let's say 1982 to 1994 -- the results were oftentimes
spectacular, such as 1993's Mrs. Doubtfire, when his cleverness and comic
timing transcended the saccharine boundaries of the typical family film and
made it legitimately funny. For younger readers looking for a relatively
contemporary comparison, Will Ferrell did the same thing in Elf.
In Mrs. Doubtfire, Williams plays Daniel Hillard, a sporadically employed actor
and devotedly loving father to his three kids. He's the "fun" parent, the one
whose idea of an impromptu birthday party features a petting zoo and dancing on
the furniture. For Daniel's wife, Miranda (Sally Field), the fun ended a long
time ago. Tired of playing the stern taskmaster, she demands a divorce.
The judge decrees that Daniel can only see the kids on weekends, which is
unacceptable to him. Looking for any way to spend time with them, he doctors
Miranda's ad for a housekeeper, dons tons of make-up, and fashions an English
accent out of Masterpiece Theater. Voila, now he's Mrs. Doubtfire, the coolest
nanny ever!
What begins as a way to see his kids gets complicated when Mrs. Doubtfire
becomes a crucial part in the unknowing family's life. The kids love her and
Miranda considers her a confidante. When Miranda starts dating a hunky ex-flame
(Pierce Brosnan), the line between performance and real life gets very blurry,
especially since Mrs. Doubtfire turns Daniel into a better father.
The movie's success relies on a delicate balance. Williams handles the dual
roles expertly; he restrains his id just enough when under layers of latex and
padding, delivering a series of puns and one-liners that keeps the movie lively
and dramatically credible. The professional supporting cast, specifically
Brosnan and Field, keep us from drowning in Williams' antics, and the script
(co-written by Leslie Dixon of 2003's Freaky Friday) handles comedy and growing
pains with equal skill. Mrs. Doubtfire doesn't deal with divorce as a punch
line, but as a life situation a shattered family has to handle.
Yes, the movie is sometimes too frantic for its own good and there are one too
many scenes of Williams riffing, but it's not the train wreck it could have
been if it had starred, say, David Spade. Mrs. Doubtfire is also relevant in
the case of Williams. Maybe he needs to stifle his buffoonish antics and
welcome some discipline into his life. Hey, it worked for Daniel Hillard; maybe
it can work in the real world.
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Review by Pete Croatto
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