BOTTOM
LINE:
Director Sam Mendes
retreads the themes of his earlier masterpiece American
Beauty in this film but without the biting satire, razor-sharp
commentary or overarching themes that made that film work so well.
Leo and Kate deliver some fine performances, but the film is clumsy
and uneven in its execution and character motivations, with no defining
statement or theme.
THE GOOD:
“Revolutionary Road” has much in common
with director Sam Mendes’ previous work on suburban life,
“American Beauty”, although the tone is much more serious
and the setting is now the more patriarchal 1950s where men where
the central point of attention within the family. Leonardo DiCaprio
and Kate Winslet, re-teaming for the first time since “Titanic”,
do a fine job as Frank and April Wheeler who once had hopes and
dreams in their youth which have now been crushed by the responsibilities
of family life. Several dramatic sequences between the pair are
riveting to watch, particularly as they sort through the complications
surrounding their desires versus their responsibilities and the
way the society around them at the time reacted to their wish to
do something outside the box. There is an inherent tragedy at work
in the story, and is highlighted by an effective musical score by
Thomas Newman and lovely visuals by cinematographer Roger Deakins.
The exploration of 1950s social culture, particularly within the
context of the married couples of the time is of special interest,
particularly looking at it from a 21st century perspective where
the inequality between the sexes is not as pronounced in relationships
as what it was back then. Another good point is the character of
John Givings played by an inspired Michael Shannon, a man undergoing
psychiatric assessment but unusually is the only character who speaks
the truth to everyone in the film, no matter how much it might hurt.
THE
BAD: There are two major
problems with this film; the first is that Sam Mendes has already
covered this material a hundred times better in “American Beauty”
and the second is that the execution of the story is uneven and clumsy,
without making any major statements. The heart of the story revolves
around the dynamic between Frank and April but the inconsistent and
changing motivations of these characters do not generate much empathy.
The character of Frank comes off worse in this regard because he acts
unwittingly inconsiderate to April who feels she has no choice but
to nod her head and accept any criticism coming to her and reminders
of her place as a housewife. Frank also has an affair with a girl
from the secretarial pool at his office, which makes him look even
worse and selfish when April comes up with a plan to give Frank everything
he wished for in life. However, although empathy can be felt for April,
by the end of the film, her motivations become inconsistent and a
little crazy as well, including having sex with her neighbour, and
then later dying as a result of her self-abortion of her third child.
She wants to live life and in the end society convinces Frank otherwise,
leading April to become upset to the point of mental depression, causes
that might elicit empathy for April’s character but unfortunately
do not thanks to the inconsistent direction by Mendes. You feel for
these characters, and then they do or say something that makes them
unlikeable. Frank can move from an idealist to a self-absorbed patriarch
while April moves from thoughtful and considerate to selfish and unable
to change. These inconsistencies ultimately stifle any point the film
is trying to make; although you will see smaller points being made,
you will not walk out of the cinema feeling as if you went on any
kind of satisfying journey with these characters, nor come out with
a feeling of what the film was trying to say.