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The Savages
 
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Nursing Profession : Taking Care of Our Elderly

Customer Reviews

Aging parents and insignificant lives.
 
Review Date: February 21, 2010
Reviewer: Balaji Rajam, San Jose, CA
There are movies which are very much stilted to tug at your heartstrings. Then there is this movie. Without an inkling of apparent effort, this movie makes you care for its characters in a manner which even surprises you.

As a country we are obsessed with fighting aging. But it is inevitable. The movie deals with getting older and dealing with people who are getting old.

Laura Linney has to be one of the most underrated actresses of our generation. I don't think I have ever seen her in a below-outstanding performance.

Mr. Hoffman is having an incredible year. He has been outstanding in every one of his movies. Whether it was the brash CIA agent, the scheming brother or the helpless son. He has portrayed such diverse characters with the minimal fuss.

There is and will be lot of talk about 'Juno' where the humor is more apparent. But "The Savages" has a certain quality about it which makes it stand apart.

The ridiculousness of human nature often leaves us not knowing whether to laugh or cry. The movie accomplishes the same in a manner which very few movies have.
Brilliantly insightful and touching, realistically funny
 
Review Date: February 4, 2010
Reviewer: lavender_amanda, Washington
I watched this movie not expecting to like it. I'm not much for dark comedies, and it was clear this was being promoted as such.

I'm so glad I decided to give it a chance. First, the casting was perfect. The supporting cast was fantastic, and Laura Linney and Philip Seymour Hoffman were wholly believable as struggling siblings who love, but don't really know each other. Watching them, I felt a richness in their relationship, as though they DID share a somewhat troubled life history, and were now battling the unwanted awkwardness of being together as they both tried to move beyond their past.

Their loyalty to their father in spite of who he was is confused, tense, difficult, tender, and honest; their struggles with his care are universal. Every one of us has our own reaction to difficult times in our lives, and for the Savages, their relationships were almost defined by their ability to be honest about their feelings, and to laugh when they'd reached their breaking points.

I wouldn't call this a comedy...but I wouldn't call it a drama, either. It slips between typical categories and lands somewhere few movies do: real life.
Engaging realism
 
Review Date: October 30, 2009
Reviewer: Electrifier, FL
4 1/2 stars.

The Savages immediately brings to our attention the
uncaring treatment of the elderly by caretakers in
its opening scene. And calls into question the high
tolerance one must have to deal with people in a decrepit
condition suffering from diseases that can regress one
back into child-like behavior.

Two estranged siblings (Laura Linney and Philip-Seymour
Hoffman) are quickly called upon to help their unpleasant
father whom is diagnosed with dementia. The daughter, Wendy,
realizes the gravity of the situation and seeks to fulfill
that motherly instinct by caring for a man who could hardly
be called a father. The son, Jon, is initially reluctant and
uncaring of the father's plight, but gives in due to Wendy's
pressure and his obligation as a son. Down the road we are
given glimpses of the father's true colors at the most
inopportune moments, hinting at what a truly horrible man
he was. Mr. Savages old film reel is shown one night at the
home, adding racism to his list of horrible traits.

The wounded siblings seek to establish some form of a normal
love life, but it is precarious at best, as the daughter
sleeps with a married man she has no intellectual or emotional
connection to. When this man brings attention to the reality
of the situation, Wendy quickly severs contact. Subesquently,
she becomes infatuated with a Nigerian caretaker, one who
shows her the attention that she desperately craves. In an
awkward scene the two sit side-by-side and Wendy unexpectedly
puts a move on the man, and makes the comment "I'm so gross!"
when her advance is rejected (A symptom of her father's racism).
Despite her beauty, she does not see herself as beautiful and
does not feel worthy of true emotional intimacy, but only
physical love with no strings attached (A symptom of incest
by the father?). The son fairs just as badly, rejecting emotional
commitment and making far-fetched excuses as to why he cannot
be with a woman that clearly cares about him, or is at least
trying to. Amusingly, the two become judges of each others torn
lives, but fail to be introspective of their own.

The actors play these flawed characters superbly with nuance
and realism, exposing those repressed emotions at just the
right moments. The film's main points of human fallibility and
death are done so effectively; leaving the viewer to be
introspective of our own lives and sympathetic to those close
to us. "The Savages" certainly deserves the awards it has recieved
and I will be on the lookout for future films by Tamara Jenkins.

This is the third film in which Laura Linney soothingly says
the name John (The Mothman Prophecies and the John Adams series
being the other two, though there might be more).
A cut above the rest
 
Review Date: August 3, 2009
Reviewer: e. verrillo, williamsburg, ma
The dysfunctional family is a theme which has been so overdone in American film that I can't blame you if the prospect of watching yet another screwy family on screen elicits a groan. But The Savages stands a cut above the rest, not just for the performances (which were wonderful), or the writing (which was flawless), but because at long last the reason for the dysfunctionality makes sense. (It's not just the fact that we're junk-food-eating Americans who watch too much TV.)

The plot of the movie is deceptively simple. Two siblings, Wendy and Jon Savage, are suddenly faced with the responsibility of caring for their demented father, Lenny. Neither sibling has been what you would call a success in life. Wendy, who works as a temp in New York City, is stuck in a tire-spinning relationship with a married man. Jon, a theater professor in Buffalo who is perpetually on the verge of writing his definitive work on Berthold Brecht, can't seem to keep a relationship going either. And Lenny, apparently, has not done anything approaching a good job as a father. Normally, the interactions of three people who haven't got much going for them wouldn't make a good movie. In this case, however, it worked.

The reason it worked is that the interactions were entirely realistic. Wendy's neurotic quest to find some indication that her father has actually cared about his children is entirely plausible. (It is only in movies that daughters dramatically lash back at cold fathers. Mostly they seek approval.) Jon's rejection of Wendy's efforts is equally as plausible, although you don't find out why until the end of the film. As with Wendy, Jon provokes no confrontation with his father. There is no cathartic moment of resolution--just quiet resignation. The fact that nothing is overdramatized is what makes the film so believable.

Even if the topic does not appeal to you, The Savages is worth watching just for Philip Seymour Hoffman, who, as always, gives a masterful performance. Hoffman's ability to convey subtle emotions--of every variety--is simply unmatched. Laura Linney, as the pill-popping Wendy, gives a fine performance, as does Philip Bosco as the irascible Lenny. The supporting cast was convincing enough to make you think they weren't actors--just real people. And that's precisely what this film was about.
Savages
 
Review Date: July 16, 2009
Reviewer: Mulan,
Great movie! After I heard about it, I rented a copy and reviewed it with a co-worker in the hopes that we can show this movie to our students next schoolyear. We teach Certified Nursing Assisting Program and its definitely a big YES!! Overall, it is a wonderful movie for any family to watch as it shows about love, care, decision making and many other elements on aging parents.

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