We Don't Live Here Anymore Movie Review
We Don't Live Here Anymore Review

"We Don't Live Here Anymore" Overview

Rating: R
2004
Cast and Crew
Director : John CurranProducer : Naomi Watts,Jonas Goodman
Screenwiter : Larry Gross
Starring : Mark Ruffalo,Laura Dern,Peter Krause,Naomi Watts
Touted as a sexy and provocative drama, We Don't Live Here Anymore is an
ensemble piece that strains the attention span as two couples engage in a
musical beds tango. The actors are seriously exploring how to make it fresh and
meaningful, but the soapy, voyeuristic writing binds them to the prosaic as it
focuses on sex, confusion and values that change to match the impulse.
Terry Linden (Laura Dern) is the most wronged one here since it's English
professor hubby Jack (Mark Ruffalo) who is stepping out on her with close
friend Edith Evans (Naomi Watts) but, with her nagging nature and
late-in-the-day histrionics, she fails to spark much sympathy. Edith's husband
Hank (Peter Krause) doesn't seem quite as victimized by Edith's infidelity
perhaps because he's hitting on Terry when the opportunity arises. Besides,
there's already something distant in this marriage. Both couples have kids.
We don't know exactly why Jack has lost interest in Terry but the best guesses
might have something to do with her household sloppiness and general lack of
personality. There is also the possibility that it's a purely hormonal
intoxication with Edith, the fox of the group, no contest. Despite the steam
that's building between the two-households, stopping well short of actual
wife-swapping, they maintain the appearance of New England harmony by jogging
and watching TV together.
The combustible situation is more an emotive outing for an ensemble cast than
it is a smart vehicle for insights into marriage and desire. When truth rears
its ugly head, and motivations are exposed, the issues are joined head on but
the dialogue seems more contrived than visceral and the tale wanders deeper
into superficiality. A somewhat sidelined issue with potential traction is the
negative effect unfaithful parents have on their children, but their sense of
helplessness because of adulterous conduct doesn't get much focus. Despite
that, the performances by the young cast of Sam Charles, Haili Page, and
Jennifer Bishop stand out as the most honest.
The people who voted this a screenwriting award (at Sundance) need to have
their pathos meters readjusted as well as their tendency to read more meaning
into a film than the film itself provides. The exemplary actors need to find
better material and less tiresome minds at the helm than those provided by
director John Curran and writer Larry Gross, who adapted the film from two
Andre Dubus short stories. Dubus' story "The Killing" was the basis for In the
Bedroom in 2001.
She lives in England, actually.
Reviewer: Jules Brenner





