Ken Morefield on “Dan In Real Life” (plus some thoughts of my own)

I’m a big fan of Peter Hedges’ Pieces Of April—it’s the perfect blend of quirky indie charm and real emotional heart—and so I was fairly intrigued when his latest, Dan In Real Life, popped up on the radar. The trailer looked promising, and it starred the always luminous Juliette Binoche and John Mahoney (for whom I have a great fondness following Frasier). Oh yeah, and Steve Carell.
Renae and I finally sat down and watched it a week ago or so, and we both thought it was alright. Not nearly as enjoyable or affecting as Pieces Of April, but it seemed to have its heart in the right, albeit ultra-sappy, place. But more I thought about the movie, especially its last act, the more I found myself disliking the film. And Ken Morefield’s review, er, rant sums up why quite nicely.
Dan in Real Life is one of those Three’s Company/sitcom style comedies in which people get themselves into bigger and bigger complications trying to cover up something that wouldn’t be half the problem their secrecy was if they simply were honest and rational for any thirty second segment of the film.
It is the type of film in which a woman will strip and get into a shower where she knows a guy is hiding because she is too embarrassed to admit he was in the bathroom talking to her while she was washing her face and too stupid to tell the person who asks to talk to her to wait for her in the other room and she’ll be out in a few minutes.
It is the type of film in which characters spend days of screen time (what seems like years of our life time) lying to or avoiding honest conversations with people they love so much because they love them so much and are afraid the truth might hurt them a little bit.
And his observations of the film’s “reconciliation” between Steven Carrell’s and Dane Cook’s characters is spot on. Truth be told, I found this to be the most egregious of the film’s missteps—or to put it more bluntly, the part of the film that really pissed me off. As Morefield puts it:
I think the part of Dan in Real Life I liked the least was Dan’s resolution with his brother who first hits Dan and then interrupts Dan’s attempts at apology to rush out the door and get in a car with a hotter, younger chick who was trying to pick up Dan at a bar earlier in the film. What, exactly, is the point of the scene? Turnabout is fair play? The brother landed on his feet or wasn’t really that into the girl to begin with? No reading of this scene is consistent with what the character and the film has told us is true to that point about the brother’s feelings for his girlfriend, but, I’m hard pressed to see how any scene that tried to honestly deal with the fallout of the discovery could be resolved in 30 seconds or less so that we can get on with the happy ending.
I’m not a huge Dane Cook fan, but his Mitch Burns was by far the film’s most enjoyable character, and in some ways it’s most sympathetic: a guy who, it’s implied throughout the film, has always been something of a screw up but is now finally trying to do something right with an honest, loving relationship.
But the movie sees fit to to repay such behavior by screwing him over, by turning him into a total ass in the final act—a move that, for lack of a better term, is just mean-spirited. And this, in a movie that espouses the need for love, forgiveness, and understanding—all traits needed to survive in a family of any size.
I can’t help but compare this family to the one in Pieces Of April. Certainly, the family in Hedges’ previous film was quite a bit more dysfunctional, on the verge of falling apart, really. But I believed them. There was truth in their interactions, squabbles, and blow-ups, and as such, there was truth in their moments of redemption and grace, however fleeting they might’ve been.
However, I don’t believe in the family in Dan In Real Life. However much fun they might have playing family games of hide-and-seek, or taking excursions to the beach or bowling alley, however tight they might be during family talent shows, barely any of it rings true. The Burns are the sort of family that you expect to find living in one of those warmly glowing houses in a Thomas Kinkade painting. They’re idyllic, charming, nostalgic, and winsome—because, really, who doesn’t want a picture-perfect family like that—but with ‘nary an ounce of truth to be found anywhere.
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4 Comments
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Kenneth R. Morefield
1 year, 10 months ago
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John Bell
1 year, 10 months ago
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RT
1 year, 10 months ago
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Nicholas
1 year, 10 months ago
Commenting is not available in this weblog entry.Woo-hoo, a shout out on Opuszine! Thanks, Jason. (I think I’ve now completed the career Grand Slam of getting mentions (though not for the same article) in all the right film blogs: Broken Stove, FilmChat, Filmjourney, Girish, Green Cine Daily, Long Pauses, Looking Closer, Truffin.com, and now, at long last, Opuszine.
Seriously, though, I’m right there with you on the film’s treatment of the family in general and Mitch in particular. I kept thinking back to an early scene in which someone (I think the mom) said to him that if he messed up the relationship with Marie that the family would dump him and keep her. Guess it was just loving teasing (hardee-har-har) of the type that loving families that do crossword puzzles can do because they know the other party knows its all in good fun. At least with “Knocked Up” or “The Squid and the Whale” one can attribute family members’ reluctance to criticize to a “people who live in glass houses” mentality. The Weist and Mahoney parents, though, are so darn idealized, that I assume it is supposed to be sincere when she says to Dan that he’s made a lot of mistakes but that falling in love with Marie was not one of them.
Huh? What does that even mean? And why does she take an attitude of “I’m tired of all your screw ups” with Mitch but “got to love family, even when they mess up” with Dan?
And another thing…now, wait, I’m liable to go off on another rant…
I share your perplexity at the popularity of this film.
Keep up the good work,
Ken
I still haven’t seen this yet, which is surprising since a couple of the scenes were shot in my house, and more across the street from my house, and even more where I get my coffee in the morning.
I want to disagree with this post because I really enjoyed watching Dan in Real Life (albeit in a light-handed, fluffy entertainment kind of way), but I found myself agreeing with many of your points. The one I’ll take exception to is the shower scene. Juliette Binoche, in all her delightful Frenchness, is the character who automatically stands out from the rest. The very fact that she’s dating the “screw up,” even though she’s an educated and insightful woman, shows that her character is willing to throw everything a bit off-kilter. I though the shower episode was well-played.
Between this and the “I’m not religious, I’m spiritual” post, I think you are sharing my brain.
The thing that annoyed me most about this film was that it started off conning you into the belief that it had a real heart. By the time it reached the “talent show” scene, however, any vestige of reality was gone, and when it reach the aforementioned Dane-Cook-riding-off-with-the-loose-woman-scene I felt like I was watching a different movie than the one I started out with.
As the scene over the end credits played out, I might as well have been watching Shrek.