Product Details
The Savages [Theatrical Release]

The Savages [Theatrical Release]
Directed by Tamara Jenkins

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Product Details

  • Rating: R (Restricted)

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
It's almost impossible to describe The Savages in a way that makes it sound as richly engaging and enjoyable as it is. The story sounds bleak: Two unhappy siblings--Wendy (Laura Linney, You Can Count on Me) and Jon Savage (Philip Seymour Hoffman, Capote)--are forced to grapple with their dying father (Philip Bosco, Damages) as he slips into dementia. But this spare outline doesn't capture the wealth of human detail that the script and performances contain. Linney and Hoffman vividly portray the sort of cluttered, precarious relationship that brothers and sisters can have, thick with past grievances but also unspoken affections and connections that can't even be articulated. As Wendy and Jon struggle to make some kind of peace with their difficult father, watching these wonderfully understated yet compelling actors is a pleasure unto itself. But the script and direction deserve these actors; filmmaker Tamara Jenkins (Slums of Beverly Hills) finds honest emotion and sly, sideways humor in the starkness of mortality. She doesn't force any easy epiphanies on her story, but lets the characters find solace through their own clumsy efforts. Anyone who appreciates the messiness of humanity--the territory that Hollywood movies seem to have surrendered to smart indie films like The Squid and the Whale, Little Children, or The Good Girl--will find The Savages a smart, genuine, and empathic portrait of life. --Bret Fetzer


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Customer Reviews

It's OK3
A watchable, well made and well acted film about selfish people trying to take care of their dying father. I found most of the characters to be faily unlikable, the Squid and the Whale/big city intellectual/loveless types, always whining about how busy they are with their professoring and dealing with much less important things than caring and giving attention to someone who is sick (i.e. real life). It's fine, there's nothing really wrong with the film, but it's slight and decidedly not a "good time", and fairly devoid of anyone I'd want to meet in real life.

Born to be savage: a life time penalty5
The film handles brillantly a common challenge that many of us have to face: what to do with a demented parent.
The general problem is generic, the individual circumstances vary according to our situation in life. Money helps. A functional family life helps. Benevolent geography helps.
Linney and Hoffman are among the best contemporary actors, and they give us two people with enough problems of their own, who didn't need a demented father dropping from the sky on them, which happens due to the death of his life partner. They are siblings from a 'dysfunctional' family, the father had disappeared from their life for 20 years, he is remembered as unloving and abusive, and he does behave in a way that one would not want to meet him in real life. His 'kids' are struggling middle aged intellectuals, with pityful emotional lives, but still hopeful for improvement. (You get to hear Hoffman sing a Brecht song in German; consider this a bonus.)
Some underdeveloped mind had classified this film as a 'comedy'. That was what we expected when we started watching the film, but we soon realized how far off that label is. I mention this because it gives a good contrast to one of the strong features of the film and of its characters: there is a sense of humor in the midst of sadness. The Savages definitely would have deserved at least 2 acting award nominations at the last Oscars.

Hoffman and Linney at their best!5
Laura Linney well deserved the Oscar nomination she got for this film.

And Philip Seymour Hoffman, as usual, delivers a character subtly different from every other role I've seen him in.

Hoffman is one of the most amazing actors gracing our screen these days! Total confident living in the present moment, emotional openness without a hint of bathos.