view all comments (1) - add your comments
Rain Man Movie Review
Rain Man Review
"Rain Man" Overview

Rating: R
1988
Cast and Crew
Director : Barry LevinsonProducer : Mark Johnson
Screenwiter : Ronald Bass,Barry Morrow
Starring : Dustin Hoffman,Tom Cruise,Valeria Golino,Gerald R. Molen,Jack Murdock,Michael D. Roberts
Do you know about “high level” autistic people? They are amazingly intelligent.
They can carry on conversations, memorize phone books, follow schedules, recite
statistics, calculate square roots, and count the number of toothpicks spilled
on the floor in just a few seconds. But they can’t think abstractly — they can’
t tell you the price of a car in comparison to the price of a candy bar. Also,
they get rather disturbed when someone interrupts their routine.
Raymond Babbitt (Dustin Hoffman) is a “high level” autistic man living in a
mental hospital in Cincinnati, Ohio. When his father dies, he inherits $3
million, much to his brother’s dismay. Raymond’s brother, Charlie (Tom Cruise),
never knew about him. He was very angry to hear that their estranged father
left everything to Raymond except for a 1949 Buick Roadmaster. Charlie leaves
his shaky car business in Los Angeles and travels to Ohio to find out where his
father’s estate went. When Charlie discovers Raymond, he decides to abduct him
and bring him back to his home in L.A. until he gets his share of the money.
Unfortunately, Raymond refuses to fly (he knows about crashes at every major
airline expect for one, which only departs from Australia). Therefore, Charlie
and Raymond begin a cross-country trip in the Roadmaster, which leads Charlie
down a winding road to frustration, impatience, and eventually, self-discovery.
Barry Levinson, who stepped in after three previous directors bailed (it is
revealed on the DVD commentary track that even Steven Spielberg was lined up to
direct), finds a subtle sense of humor in Charlie’s interaction with Raymond.
The humor allows the film to succeed beyond a dramatic level, but on a comedic
level as well. While it may be difficult to identify with Raymond, we can all
identify with Charlie. I’m not saying that everyone is equally as self-absorbed
and narrow-minded — not even I am that cynical — but just about everyone
struggles with impatience, frustration, and confusion at times. Take one scene
in which Charlie argues with his girlfriend, Susanna, which makes us laugh
simply because we identify with Charlie’s frustration:
Susanna: You use me, you use Raymond, you use everybody.
Charlie: Using Raymond? Hey Raymond, am I using you? Am I using you Raymond?
Raymond: Yeah.
Charlie. Shut up! He’s answering a question from a half hour ago.
Ronald Bass and Barry Morrow’s script flows effortlessly from scene to scene
and makes perfect sense. It’s a familiar formula — the “odd couple” road movie
— but it feels refreshingly new thanks to the engaging chemistry between Tom
Cruise and Dustin Hoffman, and the uniqueness of their circumstances.
Reportedly, Hoffman was originally selected to play Charlie, but after seeing a
blind woman with cerebral palsy play full concerto on the piano, he decided to
play the part of Raymond. He’s perfect for the role, and I can’t imagine him
playing Charlie. That role belongs to Tom Cruise, who is swimming in familiar
waters with another egotistical character, but brings freshness and edge to his
performance nonetheless. Hoffman — in a stunningly consistent, career defining
performance — gives Raymond a lovable personality, yet is careful to distance
himself from everyone else.
Rain Man works so well because of its simplicity. It doesn’t try to perform
miracles or discover cures; instead, it merely observes a man’s acceptance and
self-discovery. In the history of the cinema, very few “odd couples” have
complimented each other in the way that Cruise and Hoffman’s do in Rain Man.
They resonate beyond their fictional limitations, harboring in our memories,
and occasionally surface at times when we find ourselves inpatient or
frustrated. It reminds us how we can all strive to be better people.
Reviewer: Blake French
IT SHOWS THE DAY TODAY LIFE OF A MAN ORDINARY ,RATHER AUTISTIC,,FROM THE EYES OF
US NORMAL HUMAN BEINGS ,IT SHOWS THAT THE SO "CALLED HANDICAPED " IS TRUE TO HIS
NATURE THE SCENE WHEN HE SAYS THAT BOXERS ARE HIS REQUIREMENT & THE FLIGHT JOURNEYS
ARE DANGEROUS ,ALL I COULD THINK OF WAS ONE MORE MOVIE WHICH SHOWS THE HANDICAP OF ANOTHER
AUTISTIC SEAN PENN"IN I'M SAM AND HIS DAUGHTER.I DO BELIEVE THAT THE FANTASTIC HOP
STEP THAT MOST OF US STARTED AFTER THE MOVIE IS THE REARD TO THE ACTORS AND DIRECTORS
just a fan
view all comments (1) - add your comments






