Review #1303: A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood.
Cast:
Tom Hanks (Fred Rogers), Matthew Rhys (Lloyd Vogel), Susan Kelechi Watson (Andrea Vogel), Chris Cooper (Jerry Vogel), Enrico Colantoni (Bill Isler), Maryann Plunkett (Joanne Rogers), Tammy Blanchard (Lorraine), Wendy Makkena (Dorothy), and Carmen Cusack (Margy) Directed by Marielle Heller.
Review:
“You know everyone has lots of ways of feeling, and all those ways of feeling are fine. It’s what we do with our feelings that matter in this life. I trust that you’re growing in ways that will help you with whatever feelings you may have. When you’re a child and when you’re a grown up. I hope you’re able to grow to respect whoever you are inside.” - Mister Rogers
I do admit that there was plenty of interest in my mind to see this film. I even watched a pair of Mister Rogers Neighborhood episodes to remind myself of the effect that the show and its star had when it came to charm and sincerity when it came to feelings. This is a biographical drama loosely inspired by the 1998 article by Tom Junod, "Can You Say ... Hero?", published by Esquire Magazine. It centers itself on its reporter character and the impact that his interview with Rogers has on him, as opposed to a biopic. A documentary based on his life and guiding philosophy had already been released prior with Won't You Be My Neighbor? (2018), but it is still interesting to see what one can do with depicting a man as beloved as Fred Rogers - a beacon of goodness when it came to public television and beyond - on screen. In a time like this where skepticism and cynical outlooks seem more and more prevalent in both media and life as a whole, it does seem refreshing to see a film that doesn't need to escape through action but rather careful honesty. It confronts its drama with the kind of style one could see from the show when it dealt with one's emotions (which work with children just as well as with adults) without becoming overly mawkish. Hanks drives the film all the way forward with care and sincerity, a portrait very much like its subject that inspires some thought alongside a smile without being in the film as much, looming even before he is formally introduced to his costar (helped by a nicely recreated opening sequence of the show, no doubt). Rhys has the task of playing someone racked with vulnerability and world-weariness for a character whose arc leans more towards fiction with its family drama trappings. Ultimately, his striking distinction serves the movie fine, proving worthy enough to follow in the film without needing to see Hanks pop out until proven necessary. It all comes with the right air of care, where one finds to accept their flaws and open themselves through the eyes of someone who strove to be honest and good on and off the camera while still being human. Watson does fine with the family drama without being in the background often. Cooper gives off a few layers to make an interesting play on the family drama without being too predictable. The rest of the cast fill in the environment fine. On the whole, it is the little moments that provide big results, such as a sequence involving silence in a public setting (itself a take off an actual call for silence by Rogers at an awards ceremony), or even just sequences around the Neighborhood set that seem so inviting. One can find themselves invested into this world because it doesn't try to evade or hide its human self, where fact and fiction work themselves into a well balanced thing to spend time with. Maybe it will inspire some emotion within the fellow viewer, but it certainly will inspire a look within oneself inside and outside.
Well, well, a Sunday review. Actually, I had meant to do this earlier, but this whole week has been a busy one. Oddly enough, today is my birthday - so why not break the (unofficial) no-Sunday tradition just once? Good to be another year older, too.
Overall, I give it 8 out of 10 stars.
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