Danny Glover Movie:

The Royal Tenenbaums The Criterion Collection



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Danny Glover Movie:
The Royal Tenenbaums The Criterion Collection



Movie
The Royal Tenenbaums (The Criterion Collection)
The Royal Tenenbaums (The Criterion Collection)
List Price: $19.99Label: Touchstone Pictures

Salesrank: 1024

Released: July 9, 2002
Our Price: $9.92
Used Price: $5.65
MPAA Rating: R (Restricted)
Media: DVD

Features:

  • Anamorphic
  • Closed-captioned
  • Color
  • DTS Surround Sound
  • NTSC
  • Starring:

  • Owen Wilson
  • Ben Stiller
  • Luke Wilson
  • Gene Hackman
  • Gwyneth Paltrow
  • Editorial Review:
    THE TENENBAUM KIDS WERE ALL ONCE CHILD PRODIGIES, DESPITE GROWING UP WITH AN INEFFECTIVE FATHER. DETERMINED TO MAKE THINGS RIGHT THAT HE HAS A ESTRANGED FAMILY. ROYAL TENENBAUM ANNOUNCES YEARS LATER THAT HE HAS A TERMINAL ILLNESS AND MOVES BACK INTO HIS WIFE'S HOUSE WHERE THEIR CHILDREN ARE ALSO LIVING.

    Description of The Royal Tenenbaums (The Criterion Collection):
    In a fitting follow-up to Rushmore, writer-director Wes Anderson and cowriter-actor Owen Wilson have crafted another comedic masterwork that ripples with inventive, richly emotional substance. Because of the all-star cast, hilarious dialogue, and oddball characters existing in their own, wholly original universe, it's easy to miss the depth and complexity of Anderson's brand of comedy. Here, it revolves around Royal Tenenbaum (Gene Hackman), the errant patriarch of a dysfunctional family of geniuses, including precocious playwright Margot (Gwyneth Paltrow), boyish financier and grieving widower Chas (Ben Stiller), and has-been tennis pro Richie (Luke Wilson). All were raised with supportive detachment by mother Etheline (Anjelica Huston), and all ache profoundly for a togetherness they never really had. The Tenenbaums reconcile somehow, but only after Anderson and Wilson (who costars as a loopy literary celebrity) put them through a compassionate series of quirky confrontations and rekindled affections. Not for every taste, but this is brilliant work from any perspective. --Jeff Shannon

    The Royal Tenenbaums (The Criterion Collection) Reviews:
    top 10 5 Star Review
    2009-10-06 - Royal Tenenbaums has to be one of my favorite movies ever. This is one of those that always makes me laugh yet has a great drama tone to it too. I have watched it too many times to count and yet never get tired of it. I guess I am a Wes fan though because it seems people either hate or love his movies, and I love them!

    Tell me a story. . . 5 Star Review
    2009-08-26 - Tell me a story...


    The Royal Tenenbaums is a film that could have started out as a book, one of
    those books, like Harry Potter, that has illustrations so that you can imagine the characters mostly for yourself, with a bit of help from the author.

    As the story is not in fact from a book, I am going to say that it is like a snow globe, a tiny universe that makes sense if you press your nose up against the glass and squint.

    Without the narrator (Alec Baldwin), you would be completely lost. Some people are completely lost anyway, given the number of factual errors that occur in the reviews printed here.

    A brief summary: The story starts with all of the Tenenbaum children, who appear to be in their thirties, moving back to their mother's home, a castle-sized house located somewhere in New York. Explanations are skimpy for this at best. At the same time, across town, their father, estranged from the family for years, needs a free place to stay.

    So, for the first time in 18 years, all of the Tenenbaums are together under one roof.

    The mood of the film varies like the weather. Sometimes it is beautiful and sunny; sometimes it is grey and snowing.

    Flashback to 18 years ago: Royal Tenenbaum (Gene Hackman) is a successful litigator, his wife, Etheline (Angelica Huston) an anthropologist, the three children are prodigies:
    Ritchie (Luke Wilson), a tennis champion
    Chas (Ben Stiller), a wizard at business
    Adopted daughter Margot (Gweneth Paltrow), a successful playwright

    The marriage breaks up, the children grow up but not well, Etheline dates but does not remarry, in fact, she and Royal are still not divorced.

    What little action there is seems to be spurred by Etheline's deciding to get married again (to her accountant, played hesitantly by Danny Glover). Royal's competitive juices, so long dormant, are revived, and he stages a play for Etheline's love and sympathy by pretending to be dying of cancer (despite eating a lot of cheeseburgers).

    The deus ex machina, that moves the story along to completion, is provided by a family friend called Eli Cash (Owen Wilson), who is presented as a drug-addicted novelist but who is really addicted to the Tenenbaum family.

    In contrast to the narrator, who gives a perfectly flat delivery, the music functions as a barometer of affect for each scene.

    Don't expect to get it all the first time; pick up this snow globe and give it another shake.












    The Royal Tenebaums 5 Star Review
    2009-08-05 - Another "strange" movie for you collection- a must have. This movie has the younger version of all these actors, it's really a good movie about the Tenebaum family and the disfuction of family life.
    Brilliant & entertaining.

    I don't get it... 1 Star Review
    2009-03-10 - Couple WASP dudes doing Woody Allen? (I recast it with Woody's people - you know, Mia as the zombie sister, Meryl as quirky kewt mom....)
    Film form of Thorazine?
    Class project?
    It's the kind of movie that I've forgotten the beginning of before even getting to the middle. It has to have an end but I'll never get there at this rate.


    THE ROYALLY DETACHED... 4 Star Review
    2009-02-26 - Anderson's witty take on a family of misfits is hilarious, but laced with an ingenious empathy for his disparate ( and, indeed, 'desperate' ) characters. The patriarch of this dysfunctional group of shrink-fodder is Royal Tenenbaum ( Gene Hackman ), a near, non-entity as a father, and his wife ( Angelica Huston ), is an archaeologist ( for the Transit Authority... ), that barely seems to have a pulse. All three of their children ( played by Gwyneth Paltrow, Luke Wilson, and Ben Stiller ) had been prodigies, that have suffered loss of either talent, or a loved one, but are as incapable of dealing with their loss, as they are of responding to one another in any perceptibly rational way. When Royal schemes his way back into the family home after being kicked out of his hotel, the family is brought back 'together.'

    I enjoyed the dialogue in this satirical bit of family dystopia, more than I did the somewhat convoluted plot, and the characters were fascinating. Definitely fun.










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