ORDINARY PEOPLE

(Feature) 1979 - 123 Minutes

 

STARRING

DONALD SUTHERLAND, MARY TYLER MOORE, JUDD HIRSCH, TIMOTHY HUTTON and ADAM BALDWIN

WRITTEN BY ALVIN SARGENT

BASED ON THE NOVEL BY JUDITH GUEST

DIRECTED BY ROBERT REDFORD

 

CHARACTER:

STILLMAN

CHARACTERS STORY:

STILLMAN IS ONE OF CONRADS' SWIMMING TEAM, BASICALLY A JOCK WHO ENDS UP FIGHTING WITH TIMOTHY HUTTONS' CHARACTER CONRAD.

THE FILM:

4-TIME ACADEMY-AWARD WINNING MOTION PICTURE DIRECTED BY ROBERT REDFORD, ORDINARY PEOPLE FOLLOWS THE STORY OF A YOUNG BOY WHO'S LIFE AND MIND IS PLAGUED BY HIS BROTHERS' DEATH IN A BOATING ACCIDENT - BLAMING HIMSELF AND GROWING EVER MORE DEPRESSED BY THE DAY, HIS FATHER FORCES HIM TO SEEK THERAPY FROM A DOCTOR WHO RISES ABOVE HIS TITLE AND BECOMES A FRIEND. THE STORY MOVES ALONG AS TENSIONS BUILD BETWEEN A MOTHER WHO BLAMES HER SURVIVING SON, A FATHER WHO BLAMES HIS WIFE AND A SON WHO BLAMES HIMSELF. WITH EXCEPTIONAL PERFORMANCES FROM TIMOTHY HUTTON, DONALD SUTHERLAND AND JUDD HIRSCH, ORDINARY PEOPLE IS A TRUE CLASSIC.

THE REVIEWS:

REVIEWED FOR VARIETY AT PARAMOUNT STUDIOS, LA, SEPTEMBER 8TH 1980:

"A powerfully intimate domestic drama, "Ordinary People" represents the height of craftsmanship across the board. Robert Redford, well-suited for Donald Sutherland's role, stayed behind the camera to make a remarkably intelligent and assured directorial debut that is fully responsive to the mood and nuances of Alvin Sargent's astute adaptation of Judith Guest's best seller. Careful nurturing by Paramount should make this a solid b.o. performer through the fall season.

While not ultimately downbeat or despairing, tale of a disturbed boy's precarious tightrope walk through his teens is played out with tremendous seriousness, thereby setting it apart from many other recent films trading in snideness and cynicism. Pic possesses a somber, hour of the wolf mood, with characters forced to definitively confront their own souls before fadeout.

Dilemma of the youth, who at first glimpse has recently attempted suicide in remorse for not having saved his older brother from drowning and thereafter proves a heavy burden for both himself and his normally complacent parents, may be too grim for some viewers, but total conviction in the story-telling and performances will grab many who have lived through their own variations on the domestic turmoil here portrayed.

Timothy Hutton, son of the late actor Jim Hutton, is up to the considerable demands of the central role. Unable to slide back into his old routine, he embarks upon a believably tentative romance with very cute schoolmate Elizabeth McGovern and begins seeing shrink Judd Hirsch. Psychiatric chit chat often reps a writer's easy way out, explaining things when they should be dramatized, and while a couple of the sessions in pic's middle go on a bit long, device for once seems valid in terms of story dynamics.

At the same time, things go from bad to worse at home. Hutton isn't convinced his parents, who always favored the dead brother, truly care about him, and the tragedy of this suburban saga is that he might be right.

Sutherland tries to communicate and ultimately sees the falseness in his life in the process of coming to grips with his troubled son. On the other hand, Mary Tyler Moore, as the mother, has centered her life for too many years, on surface values and automatic avoidance of emotion to perhaps ever change, systematically rejecting any attempt to get to the heart of the matter.

Moore's part is undoubtedly the most brilliantly written and observed, as her distress over her family's deterioration is seen more as social concern over form and neighborhood acceptability than as result of deep feeling. Backing down from any intense probing, one senses that this woman could live her entire life without ever questioning its basic components.

It's an actors' picture. but in addition to his sensitive touch with the players Redford keenly evokes the darkly serene atmosphere of Chicago's affluent North Shore and effectively portrays this WASP society's prediliction for pretending everything is okay even when it's not.

Aside from the curious note struck by design of Hirsch's office, which seems a bit on the seedy side for chic Highland Park, tech contributions, from John Bailey's subtle camerawork to Jeff Kanew's precise editing to Marvin Hamlisch's classical music adaptation, are all of a piece with Redford's highly controlled, well-ordered approach."

BY VARIETY STAFF

LEAFANS REVIEW:

THERE IS SOMETHING ABOUT THIS MOVIE, SOMETHING THAT ISN'T NOTICABLE FROM READING THE PLOT, OR HOVERING OVER REVIEWS...BUT IT MAKES YOU REALISE HOW MOVIES SHOULD BE MADE AND IT CERTAINLY SETS A STANDARD OF IT'S OWN. THE ACTING HERE IS TOP CLASS AND THE MUSICAL SCORE EXCEPTIONAL, I'D RECOMMEND THIS FILM TO ANYONE.

AWARDS AND NOMINATIONS:

1980 ACADEMY AWARDS:

BEST PICTURE - WON

BEST DIRECTOR - ROBERT REDFORD - WON

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR - TIMOTHY HUTTON - WON

BEST SCREENPLAY ADAPTATION - ALVIN SARGENT - WON

FILMING LOCATIONS:

CHICAGO, IL.

GENERAL FACTS AND STUFF THAT DOESNT FIT ANYWHERE ELSE:

RELATED LINKS:

RELATED MERCHANDISE:

DVD @ AMAZON.COM

VHS @ AMAZON.COM

BOOK @ AMAZON.COM

 

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