Pages

Saturday, August 2, 2014

Review: Wish I Was Here

by. Joe Moss
★★★★

Why on Earth did all of Hollywood refuse to back such a scintillating film as Zach Braff's sophomore release? Maybe they couldn't handle the stark clarity with which he dealt with family, religion, death, and growing up; whatever the reason, their loss--his gain. "Wish I Was Here" has managed to surpass the respect I held for his freshman offering "Garden State" (which I loved dearly) by forcing me to deal with memories of my own family even as the script played before my eyes.

Aidan Bloom (Braff) is a struggling actor with a real problem--he hasn't been able to land a gig in years, the last being a dandruff commercial. His father, Gabe (Mandy Patinkin) is sick and may be dying. His brother, Noah (Josh Gad) is a genius recluse who refuses to talk to any member of his family other than Aidan. His wife, Sarah (Kate Hudson), the sole bread-winner for the family, is being sexually harassed at work and told by her bosses to "relax and be more fun;" and his children, Grace and Tucker (Joey King and Pierce Gagnon) are in danger of being thrown out of their private Jewish schooling due lack of payment by Gabe as he spends the money on his mounting medical bills. Aidan just cannot catch a break.

As this poignant look at life in suburban California plays on, the audience cannot help but be drawn into this plight of 'every man.'  We can all relate to the struggles of paying bills, and working dead-end jobs, and putting up with harassment of all types...simply because we have no choice. The American Dream is a tough reality to maintain for many of us working schmucks. The ending of the film is about as close to reality as you would expect--and I do not think it was a surprise ending...much in the reverse, it was the ending that we, as the audience, had rooted for. The most memorable line of the film to me was stated by Aidan in the few minutes, "My brother and I had always thought of ourselves as the hero, when maybe it was we who needed to be saved."

The script was so wonderfully written by Zach and his brother, Adam. I cannot help but feel the story was pulled from their own lives. There is too much raw emotion portrayed within the film to be anything but. Zach and Kate have a magnanimous chemistry that translates beautifully on screen--you truly feel they are married and struggling together...not as separate people ponderously dredging through the quicksand of life. Kate Hudson's innate ability to bring positive energy into every scene helps elevate Braff's natural, brooding sarcasm into the stratosphere. Additionally, Mandy Patinkin has Braff's father is so spot on (and they look so similarly) that I wonder if Zach didn't have moments of hallucination back to his own childhood during filming.

Sundance did not disappoint when it announced how the audience so favorably responded to this film. I am so over the moon about this film, that I cannot express enough the whys and how quickly everyone should go to see it. If you are in the mood for a heart wrenching, true-to-life drama that transcends to address many of the social issues of today...look no further.

No comments:

Post a Comment