Tag Archives: Andie MacDowell

MY MOVIE SHELF: Groundhog Day

movie shelf

The Task: Watch and write about every movie on my shelf, in order (Blu-rays are sorted after DVDs), by June 10, 2015.  Remaining movies: 243 Days to go: 248

Movie #134: Groundhog Day

Groundhog Day is a perfect movie, and my absolute favorite work of Harold Ramis (he wrote, produced and directed the film). Framed as a silly little movie that takes place in a silly little town on a silly little holiday, Groundhog Day is actually an utterly flawless encapsulation of the human condition.

Phil Connors (Bill Murray) is a Pittsburgh weatherman sent into Punxsutawny, PA with his producer Rita (Andie MacDowell) and cameraman Larry (Chris Elliott) to cover the emergence of the groundhog and report on its modern mythological ability to predict the weather by virtue of whether or not it sees its shadow. Phil is egotistical and snide, with no use or interest in this quaint town, its people (or any people in general, especially if he thinks they’re below him, which almost everyone is), or its rituals. He wants to get in and get out as fast as possible, but when the crew is waylaid by a blizzard Phil failed to see coming, he winds up reliving the day over and over and over again. Every day he wakes up at 6AM, and it’s always February 2. The people he meets, the events of the day, they never change.

What’s really beautiful about the film (aside from the fact that Bill Murray would probably have been an excellent weatherman if acting and comedy hadn’t worked out) is that Phil experiences all the joy, all the fear, all the pain, all the boredom, all the arrogance and all the hopelessness we all would feel in this situation. The first time it happens he’s confused, of course, but then he starts to take advantage of it. He seduces Nancy (Marita Geraghty), he robs an armored truck, he goes on joyrides. He gets drunk, eats anything and everything he wants, and sometimes he just acts silly. Soon he tries to take advantage of his position to seduce Rita, but she’s not as easily maneuvered and it becomes more and more evident that the less spontaneous their interactions are — the more times Phil has relived the same moments in an effort to get them just right — the less authentic and moving they are. Every time, he drives Rita away. Every night ends in a slap when he goes too far. He becomes despondent, desperate, suicidal. He kills himself any number of times, any number of ways, but still wakes up at six the next morning. The same morning, actually, forever and ever.

The movie, of course, only shows a couple dozen of his days, but it lets us know how long this has been going on. The day he spends dressed like Clint Eastwood in an old Western, he announces he’s seen Heidi II over a hundred times. When he tells Rita he’s a god, he says “Well maybe the real God uses tricks, you know? Maybe he’s not omnipotent. He’s just been around so long he knows everything,” and he indicates it would take six-seven months to learn to flick a card into a hat as well as he does. So Phil has obviously been stuck for a very long time, and he’ll be stuck even longer before he gets it right.

At Rita’s suggestion that maybe this kind of immortality isn’t a curse sets Phil on a path of self-improvement. He does good deeds, reads classic literature and learns to play the piano. He saves a few lives, a few broken bones, a wedding (check out Michael Shannon as the Wrestlemania-loving groom!), and who knows what else when it’s all said and done. He can’t save everything, though, as evidenced by the homeless man (Les Podewell) who dies that day no matter what Phil does. Some things you just can’t change, and that helps Phil to be appreciative of the time he has and not to waste it.

And he doesn’t waste it. He’s spent, likely, years in this timeloop, learning all about this town and its people, getting to know and to care about them. He knows their rituals, their habits and even their deeply held desires. He knows Rita, too. “You like boats, but not the ocean. You go to a lake in the summer with your family up in the mountains. There’s a long wooden dock and a boathouse with boards missing from the roof, and a place you used to crawl underneath to be alone. You’re a sucker for French poetry and rhinestones. You’re very generous. You’re kind to strangers and children, and when you stand in the snow you look like an angel.” And more than just knowing her, he’s grown to truly love and honor her, as only someone who’d spent a lot of time with her could. But he’s also learned not to pressure her or rush her. He may not be able to have her forever, but he can love her all the same, and he can keep that love for himself because it is so precious. It is at this point, when he’s redeemed his soul in this way and learned true empathy and compassion, that he gets to see tomorrow.

There’s just nothing that isn’t sweet and touching and important about the primary narrative of Groundhog Day. Yes, a lot of it is silly. Stephen Tobolowsky is silly as Ned Ryerson. (Bing!) The senile old ladies are silly, as are the entire cast of characters dilly-dallying around town. The groundhog is silly. The entire premise of the holiday is silly. And silliness has been Bill Murray’s stock in trade, like, forever. But by being silly it also amplifies the absurdity of life itself, an aspect of the human condition that largely goes unexamined. Groundhog Day is saying that sometimes life is painful, sometimes it’s hard, sometimes it’s depressing, and sometimes it’s not. Sometimes you can bend the world to your will and sometimes there’s nothing you can do. Sometimes nothing makes sense. Sometimes everything is silly. It’s all just part of being alive. And while we’re alive, we should make the most of it. Live life to the fullest, be our best selves, and we will be rewarded. That’s what Groundhog Day is really about, and it is perfect.

Groundhog Day

MY MOVIE SHELF: Four Weddings and a Funeral

movie shelf

The Task: Watch and write about every movie on my shelf, in order (Blu-rays are sorted after DVDs), by June 10, 2015.  Remaining movies: 261 Days to go: 257

Movie #116: Four Weddings and a Funeral

It’s not every film that can give away a major plot point right there in the title and still be a success. I mean, Lone Survivor just kind of got mocked for it. Four Weddings and a Funeral, though, holds true to its name and still manages to deliver a devastating blow when that funeral comes to pass.

Hugh Grant plays Charles in the role that made him a Hollywood star — fidgety, bumbling, adorably awkward, incredibly endearing. He’d get pigeonholed in these types of characters for the rest of the decade, but to be honest I never actually tired of it — even if he’s much sexier and surprising as a rakish bad boy. See, he’s actually good at adorably bumbling, which is one of those things that seems like it would be easy but actually isn’t. Hugh Grant is adept at stuttering through declarations of love or at saying the exact wrong thing to the exact wrong person without ever coming off as a total social parasite. That’s a skill.

Then, of course, there’s Kristin Scott Thomas who is absolutely perfect as Fiona. Secretly in love with Charles, barely tolerable of her brother Tom (James Fleet), and really sort of above it all in general, yet she clearly has a close and strong bond with this band of friends. She loves them dearly, which instantly makes her lovable. And she was a lesbian once in school for about fifteen minutes, so she’s definitely up for living in the moment and trying new things. AND she makes Rowan Atkinson’s socially awkward priest-in-training charmingly twittery. She has virtues. Fiona is condescending and frank in all the best ways and I couldn’t possibly love her more, but then she went and did The English Patient and I’ve never really forgiven her.

The true heart and best character of the movie, though, is undeniably Gareth (Simon Callow), whose boisterous love for life is intoxicating and exhilarating. He brings all the friends together. He embraces life and encourages love and celebration. And his relationship with Matthew (John Hannah) is so beautiful and easy-going, it’s simply the best thing in all the film. (It’s never once commented upon, either, this long-standing homosexual relationship in the center of the film, until Charles mentions sort of off-handedly that it just occurred to him how the two of them were sort of married the whole time and no one knew it. That was a radical statement — a groundbreaking realization at the time, and it’s the most honest and true relationship in the entire film.)

I also love John Hannah and his sexy Scottish accent in absolutely everything — even The Mummy — but what I love most about him here is how centered and calming he is — a perfect counter to Gareth’s boundless energy and rambunctiousness. The eulogy Matthew gives at the titular funeral is gorgeously heartbreaking, and my eyes well up with tears every time.

Scarlett (Charlotte Coleman) rounds out the crew of friends (unless you count Charles’s brother David (David Bower), which I don’t, because he always seems more on the edges, even though he does play a pivotal role in the climax), and I kind of always wanted to be as free-spirited and comfortably eccentric as she was. Sadly, I don’t own a single plastic heart ring. I will remain infinitely glad, however, that she eventually marries a sexy Texan with a great sense of humor who appreciates Scarlett’s verve.

Honestly, the only thing I find troubling about the film is how off-putting and not-at-all-alluring I find Carrie (Andie MacDowell) to be. I mean, other than wearing a fabulous hat to the first wedding, she’s got a questionable fashion sense, a grating accent that seems amplified for some reason (it’s much softer in Groundhog Day, for example, which came first, so it’s not like it’s a matter of it relaxing over time), and her character is solely defined by sex partners and spoiled flippancy. Other than a fabulous roll in the hay, really, it’s hard to figure out what Charles even sees in her. I mean, anyone who goes to the store their wedding is registered at and follows up on whether the expensive items are purchased is kind of comically gauche to begin with, but she’s also flighty and unfaithful and just sort of keeps showing up for no discernible reason. Charles deserves to be not married to someone else, frankly, but then again Charles also is a terrible boyfriend/fiance, so maybe they deserve each other after all.

In fact, everyone seems to be paired up nicely with a perfect match at the end except Matthew (who still seems happy, so at least that’s something) and Fiona, who deserves much much better than Prince Charles. Really, she gets shafted the entire movie. Poor Fiona.

Four Weddings and a Funeral