Directed by:
David O. RussellScreenplay:
David O. RussellCinematography:
Masanobu TakayanagiComposer:
Danny ElfmanCast:
Bradley Cooper, Jennifer Lawrence, Robert De Niro, Jacki Weaver, Chris Tucker, Anupam Kher, John Ortiz, Shea Whigham, Julia Stiles, Paul Herman, Dash Mihok (more)VOD (3)
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Academy Award-winning romantic comedy based on the novel by Matthew Quick. Bradley Cooper stars as Pat Solitano, a former high school teacher fresh from a stint in a mental institution who moves back in with his parents in an ill-fated attempt to reconcile with his ex-wife. His life begins to come together at last when he meets Tiffany (Jennifer Lawrence), a recently-widowed amateur dancer with problems of her own, and also begins to reconnect with his obsessive-compulsive father, Pat Sr (Robert De Niro). (Entertainment in Video)
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Reviews (13)
A wonderfully tasteful affair, at times almost "P.T. Andersonian" in terms of the power of identifying with the characters emotionally/psychologically. It may seem that the more insane the characters you create in the script, the more intense the final impression will be from a certain point of view, and the overall structure of Silver Linings Playbook encourages this in its own way. However, it struck me more as a kind of sweet, sensitive, and sometimes harsh story (harsh only in terms of the emotions transferred to the viewer) about people who to be sure are "different" in certain ways (we even have tons of charts, names of diseases, and various medications for them), but it is through this "otherness" that a "normal" non-bipolar person can observe that even your average lunatic can be much more perceptive, sensitive, and insightful in many other ways than those who, according to the charts, are not officially crazy. Here I can nicely pick up on what David O. Russell was (in my opinion) really trying to say with this film – namely, that when a normal person has some strong excess in behavior or thinking, it is almost always very difficult to get them to renounce and erase something that was/is important to them, even if it was the source of future psychic disturbance. I really liked how David O. Russell demonstrated through the supporting characters that the more mentally and morally deranged may very well be the officially "normal" people whose completely tactless and boorish behavior bring down and humiliate the officially "abnormal" individuals. Silver Linings Playbook is not a film that glorifies crazy people or a film that presents emotionally vulnerable and unbalanced people as beings who are superior in their humanity to the officially "normal" ones. Silver Linings Playbook is the story of the gradual coming together of two terribly shattered human souls whose loved ones cannot help them (and if they try, they only do so very convulsively and stiffly) and instead try foolishly, but certainly with good intentions, to keep them apart. This is a superbly acted, directed and, above all, sensitively made film that is, in the purest sense of the word, a madcap romance that ultimately warms the heart beautifully in the space of two hours. And Jennifer Lawrence may not be a textbook beauty like Angelina Jolie, Natalie Portman, or Megan Fox, but she exudes such an aura that I would quickly fall in love with her (and with me she wouldn't even have to crawl on all fours). ()
The protagonists of screwball comedies acted crazy. The protagonists of Silver Linings Playbook are crazy. Of course, within the boundaries of American indie romances, i.e. they are characters with eccentric behaviour and minimal psychological depth, and they are defined only by their interactions with their immediate surroundings. He loses his nerve here and there, she has nymphomaniacal tendencies, and both of them have lost someone. Now they need to emotionally fill up the vacant space and find their lost balance (for example, in dancing). It’s not necessary to know more than that to understand the story and to get a good feeling in the end. Russell placed his bets on good actors and sharp verbal exchanges, so it’s not surprising that the film’s highlights include the scene in which several mentally unstable characters shout at each other in front of a shaky camera. However, this is just another display of “shaky cam” syndrome. The nervous camerawork is used in line with Pat’s gradually subsiding uneasiness. The scenes with the psychiatrist are calmer and the camera movements gain a certain harmony with the gradual coming together of the central couple, which, however, has long been motivated by selfishness, so a certain nervousness and uncertainty persist. In other scenes, the camera points out what the characters realise only later (the reading of the letter), thus creating tension and raising expectations, which at least make the path to the predictable ending more enjoyable. It’s pleasing that, unlike many contemporary comedies, the film isn’t made up only of scenes and one-liners and that it also has a carefully thought-out structure (a vaulted dramatic arc, if you like), without dead spots and with a climax in which all of the motifs are conscientiously put to good use. The fact that the protagonist doesn’t have his behaviour fully under control and that he has to learn how to dance because of his “treatment” does not in any way weaken the thoroughly androcentric narrative (we barely get to know Tiffany’s parents; Pat’s parents condition the denouement), and in other respects the screenplay is revisionist only in relation to screwball comedies. Social norms are undermined by the transfer of the treatment process from the institutional context to the outside world, or rather the denial of the dichotomy between “normality” and “madness”. Unlike with classic screwball comedies, the realistic context here (treatment facility, pills, aggression) make us aware that the characters behave differently than is customary in their world. However, neither one of them has to enter a more normal world. In other words, everyone is crazy; it’s just a matter of finding the right one. 75% ()
For some, Silver Linings Playbook will be a barking drama where characters merely argue, shoot diagnoses at each other, and search for happiness through priorities that are not entirely understandable. For me, Playbook is a confession, an awakening, the power of life, and a shouted desire for happiness. If I were so bold as to say that at the end of the movie, I was feeling that no matter what happens, I've got a chance to prove what is most important to me in life, it would sound like the most worn-out cliché. But it was Pat and Tiffany who got me into this sincere mood – from the first monologue to the captivating ending. ()
I'm going to be harsh and lean towards a lower rating, because as a whole this film didn't quite make the best impression on me. In terms of the acting there’s nothing to fault, but in terms of content it's pretty empty. I was bored at times, then the rush of emotions made my head spin. The only thing I really liked were the dance scenes. 3.5 stars. ()
A great romantic comedy, the best for the past... a really long time. Very untraditional, argumentative and full of paradoxical situations. Bradley Cooper is excellent (well-deserved nomination) and Jennifer Lawrence (well-deserved nomination) is the perfect psycho fox with a sensitive soul. Notwithstanding the unarguable qualities of the main duo, De Niro (well-deserved nomination) rocks the most. An unpredictable, cute, but unintrusive movie that you can take a girl to and rather than the date turning bitter, you will more likely be treated to a sweet dessert. ()
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