Elsa & Fred Review
By Rich Cline
While this geriatric romance is too simplistic and sentimental to be anything remarkable, its lively central performances add some badly needed subtext and make the film worth a look. Meanwhile, the supporting cast add some spark to their scenes, elevating the warm, silly drama with quirky humour and some more resonant themes. It's also remarkably honest about how it feels to grow older.
Set in New Orleans, the story starts as 80-year-old Fred (Christopher Plummer) is moved by his hyperactive daughter Lydia (Marcia Gay Harden) into a small apartment building. Fred's wife has recently died, but they didn't get along very well, so he's enjoying being on his own. Although Lydia's husband (Chris Noth) has yet another crazy business scheme he wants Fred to invest in. And his new next door neighbour is Elsa (Shirley Maclaine), a larger-than-life 74-year-old who claims to have once known Picasso. Her son Raymond (Scott Bakula) looks in on her from time to time, while she secretly supports her younger son Alec (Reg Rogers) in his artistic career. She also immediately starts trying to coax Fred out of his shell.
Obviously, the main idea is that you're never too old to fall in love, so director-cowriter Michael Radford (Il Postino) tries to balance a comedy about ageing with a sweet love story about an engagingly mismatched couple. The blend of genres is somewhat uneven, as the script never quite decides whether it's about making the most of the time you have left, being open to unexpected romance or accepting your family members for who they are. All of these big themes are in here, most with a fairly heavy-handed touch. But at least this means that the film is about more than just a bunch of goofy characters interacting in rather silly ways.
Yes, every character has essentially one quirky characteristic, but the actors are good enough to subvert them. MacLaine undermines the feisty-busy Elsa with a deep love of life, while Plummer makes the relentlessly grumpy Fred surprisingly likeable because of his innate curiosity. So when they come together, their romance is actually rather lively, a combination of wacky antics and underlying realism. As Elsa asks Fred, "In all your years on earth, how much did you laugh?" Thankfully, Radford never lets the film turn weepy, and the plot even takes a couple of oddball turns (including one relating to Elsa's favourite movie La Dolce Vita). There's also a surprisingly pointed comment on shifting relationships between the generations. And how much more dangerous it is to be afraid of life than of death.
Elsa and Fred Trailer
Facts and Figures
Year: 2014
Genre: Romance
Run time: 97 mins
In Theaters: Friday 7th November 2014
Budget: $10M
Distributed by: Signature Entertainment
Production compaines: Riverside Entertainment, Rio Negro, Media House Capital, Cuatro Plus Films, Defiant Pictures, Creative Andina
Reviews
Contactmusic.com: 3 / 5
Rotten Tomatoes: 53%
Fresh: 16 Rotten: 14
IMDB: 7.6 / 10
Cast & Crew
Director: Michael Radford
Producer: Matthias Ehrenberg , Ricardo Kleinbaum, Jose Levy, Edward Saxon, Nicolas Veinberg
Screenwriter: Michael Radford, Anna Pavignano
Starring: Shirley MacLaine as Elsa Hayes, Christopher Plummer as Fred Bancroft, Chris Noth as Jack, Marcia Gay Harden as Lydia Bancroft, Scott Bakula as Raymond Hayes, James Brolin as Max Hayes, Jared Gilman as Michael, George Segal as John, Wendell Pierce as Armande, Erika Alexander as Laverne, Lisa Sheridan as Dr. Sheridan
Also starring: Reg Rogers, Matthias Ehrenberg, Edward Saxon, Michael Radford, Anna Pavignano