Playing By Heart Movie Review
Playing By Heart Review

"Playing By Heart" Overview

Rating: R
1998
Cast and Crew
Director : Willard CarrollProducer : Willard Carroll,Meg Liberman,Thomas L. Wilhite
Screenwiter : Willard Carroll
Starring : Gillian Anderson,Ellen Burstyn,Sean Connery,Anthony Edwards,Angelina Jolie,Jay Mohr,Ryan Phillippe,Dennis Quaid,Gena Rowlands,Jon Stewart,Madeleine Stowe
Every year like clockwork there’s a film that tries to intertwine a dozen
characters into one monster story: Short Cuts (1993), Twenty Bucks (1993), Pulp
Fiction (1994), 2 Days in the Valley (1996), to name but a few. 1998’s entry
crept in under the wire: Playing By Heart... and it’s finally in wide release.
Now on its third (and worst) title in as many months, Heart follows about a
dozen Los Angelenos en route to love and/or misery. Among them are Anderson
and Stewart as a couple of silly/wacky would-be lovers; club kids Jolie and
Phillippe; ice queen Stowe (having an affair with Edwards); and wedded veterans
Rowlands and Connery.
The script relies on two things: making you think hard about how all these
people fit together (it’s actually quite obvious after 30 minutes, though most
of the half-wits in my audience were vocalizing “Hmmmm...” and “OH!”
frequently). Second, of course, is making you cry. Trying to, anyway. If you’
re like my wife, the touching poetry read by Burstyn to dying son Mohr will
have you all aflutter. If you’re like me, you’ll think it’s cute but
overbearingly manipulative. Perhaps that’s why 85 percent of our audience was
female....
None of this is meant to say that Playing By Heart is a bad film. It’s
actually pretty funny, and while some actors (Anderson, Jolie, Stewart) are
better than others (Mohr--beyond over the top), and some are just plain bizarre
(Quaid), the film works well as a whole and is lively from start to finish.
Hell, I can’t imagine any other director getting Connery to do an impression of
a slobbering lap dog (really).
While most other intricate follow-the-plot movies do it better, Heart is one
that’s worth a look, especially if you’re into that weepy sorta thing.
Stewart and Anderson playing with fire.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





