The number one task is restoring his marriage with his
wife. After they divorced, he beat up her new boyfriend, but water under the
bridge. Pat (Bradley Cooper) swears his parents, Pat Sr. and Dolores, (Robert
De Niro and Jacki Weaver), that everything will be fine. They’re not so sure.
One of the pros of “Silver Linings Playbook,” the 2012 comedy by David O.
Russell, is how Dolores is a stable and caring woman and has had so much
experience in dealing with compulsive behavior, because her husband is a huge
fan of the Philadelphia Eagles. Having been banned from the Eagles stadium for
fighting, Pat Sr. now watches restlessly on his TV, convinced that the Eagles
will win only if his countless fantasies are fulfilled.
Pat Jr. in desperation falls for Tiffany, played by
Jennifer Lawrence, a young widow in the neighborhood. Roger Ebert noted in his
review, “Lawrence appears here much transformed from the woman we saw in
“Winter's Bone” and “The Hunger Games.” Still only 22, she looks softer,
sweeter and somehow prettier than before, yet she plays Tiffany as all edges
and elbows, who can understand Pat because she’s crazy herself.” People call
her promiscuous, and she agrees. She’s ticked off about Pat because he
continues to think about his ex-wife, played by Brea Bee – and also because a
lot of her value to him is that’s she’s still in contact with the other woman.
In supporting roles, we meet Danny (Chris Tucker), Pat’s
patient friend from the hospital, and Dr. Cliff Patel (Bollywood actor, Anupam
Kher), his therapist. Danny’s worried that Pat is not taking his medication. Ebert
said, “Dr. Patel plays an increasingly common type in American movies, the
Indian immigrant who seems to embody certain stereotypes and then is revealed
to be completely assimilated.”
Tiffany thinks she and Pat should make out. Pat
disagrees. He doesn’t want to be unfaithful to his ex-wife. Tiffany’s eyes
narrow. We see that Pat doesn’t have a chance. Ebert said,
This all builds up into a
classic screwball comedy situation in which two bets are inspired — one
involving an Eagles-Cowboys game and the other involving a ballroom dancing
contest that Tiffany has forced Pat to join her in with a form of emotional
blackmail.
How these bets play out I
will, of course, not hint. I will note that Pat, in keeping with family
tradition, gets in trouble at the game for fighting. Don’t you sometimes wish
movies watched other movies? Imagine Pat running into the Patton Oswalt
character from “Big Fan.” How cool would that be?
I love actors. I’ve been
on an almost lifelong journey with Robert De Niro, and feel intimately familiar
with him as an actor (not as a person). Here his work unobtrusively charmed my
socks off. He’s harmlessly obsessed with the Eagles, gratefully in love with
his wife and cluelessly supportive of his son, who he doesn’t realize is an
apple who has fallen very close to the tree.
One of the creative and type of brave accomplishments
of Russell’s screenplay (inspired by a novel by Matthew Quick) is the way it
requires both father and son to face and deal with their medical issues and
against all odds finds a way to do that through both an Eagles game and a dance
contest. Ebert noted, “We’re fully aware of the plot conventions at work here,
the wheels and gears churning within the machinery, but with these actors, this
velocity and the oblique economy of the dialogue, we realize we don’t often see
it done this well.” “Silver Linings Playbook” is so good, it could be an
amazing old classic.
I had heard about this movie, but I didn’t really hear
people talk about this. Then, when I was trying to find something to watch when
I was exercising, and, I believe, I saw this on Netflix. I’m with everyone when
I say that this is a good movie to watch. I can’t say how accurate this movie
is with bipolar disorder, so only those who have it can tell. However, Cooper,
De Niro, and Lawrence all play their roles very well. I think De Niro has a child
who has bipolar, but I don’t know for sure. Julia Stiles is in here playing
Lawrence’s older sister. I find it great that Cooper and De Niro are working
together, as De Niro was Cooper’s inspiration to be an actor. Check this out if
you haven’t because this is one to see.
Next week, I will be looking at another good movie to
check out in the finale of “Robert De Niro Month.” Sorry for the late posting.
I fell asleep because I was so tired from work.






