I’m not entirely sure what Writer Bob Nelson's and Director Alexandar Payne’s
relationship with the north middle of the country is, but they sure don’t seem at all impressed with it. For example, the film is shot in black and white but this
doesn’t have anything to do with a particularly dark plot or mood.
Instead it seems to be a judgment on the location of the movie, the empty
spaces and depressed towns between Billings, Montana and Lincoln, Nebraska.
It’s like Payne didn’t think they deserved color. Nothing is going on so
you might as well not try to liven it up.
“Nebraska,” is a comedy and as the comedy it is trying to be it is perfect. The little hitch is that it is attempting to satirize
sparseness and boredom and even a perfect satire of such subjects will invariably move slow and contain fewer jokes than the usual comedy. We are treated several times to scenes of people drinking beer, watching TV, or both. This reviewer finds that such scenes lend an odd feeling of unaccomplishment. The characters are doing exactly what I myself am doing while watching it.
At times though the movie rises from its slumber to deliver some really good material. My favorite involves the introduction of Woody Grant's overweight nephews, Bart and Cole to his son David, played by Will Forte. David is not the most successful man in the world and sheepishly explains that he only sells stereo equipment in Billings. The nephews don’t respond because they don’t have jobs. After an awkward pause, Woody’s brother speaks up. "Bart here did some jail time.” Such is the excitement in ‘Nebraska’ where nothing happens, everyone is unemployed and overweight, and alcoholism is rampant because, fuck it, what else is there to do. In the end though, this is what keeps ‘Nebraska’ from being a ‘must-see’ movie. That is unless you are actually from Nebraska, than I guess you would have to see it because, I guess, what other movie is set in Nebraska. Then I suspect the people in the middle of the country would hate this movie. I remember raving about "Fargo" once to someone from North Dakota only to find out that everyone there despised the movie's portrayal of their accents. This movie may work the same way, though I suspect the people who deliberately left the place for greener pastures may absolutely love
it.
The plot is set in motion when the octogenerian of the family, Woody
Grant, gets it in his head that he won a million dollars in a sweepstakes
competition. He can’t drive and he won’t trust public transportation so he
attempts to walk to Lincoln, Nebraska where the company is located. His sons, David and Ross, played by Bob Odenkirk, try to explain to
him that the newsletter is a complete scam meant to sell magazine
subscriptions. “I didn’t even know they still did this,” David states. He’s
right. I haven’t seen one of those ‘You may have already won a million dollar’ junk
mail letters in about a decade. Nothing will dissuade Woody though from setting out time and again on foot and in bad weather.
David finally agrees to drive Woody to Nebraska because the man is really old and doesn’t have anything else going for him. A pit stop in Woody's old hometown becomes a much longer detour. Father and son walk around and take a
look at the old haunts. Everything is changed and nobody recognizes Woody. Except at the bar. People recognize Woody at the bar. Woody tells everyone in the town that he has won a million
dollars and for some incredibly odd reason everybody believes him.
Here, Payne’s satire of Middle America perhaps becomes too mean. It may
be a little too much to believe that everyone believes Woody’s story about
winning the lottery, even after his sons try to explain that it is all just a
scam, but these apparently are really desperate people living in really quiet desperation. The family
descends on Woody complaining about how his alcoholism cost them money over the
years and demanding that they get a share of the winnings. They won’t take any talk
of a scam for an answer. Everyone really really needs the money.
The performances are great, and especially noteworthy because they represent
some of the finest performances in several careers, one of which is an especially long career. That would be Bruce Dern, who at 77 years old,
is in his first lead role in a good movie for the first time. His Woody Grant
is a alcoholic mess of well-meaning dementia. Dern does a particularly good job
of seamlessly interweaving Grant’s lucid moments in with his delusions so they
really seem like they are coming from the same very old person. We learn a lot
about Woody Grant in this movie and by the end you sort of hope he gets his
money, not for him but for what he wants to do with it. Will Forte does a great
job as well in the thankless task of the straight man holding together a cast of crazy characters. Will is mainly known for comedy, notably SNL
and 30 Rock, and is yet another example of a comedian ably putting together a
dramatic performance. Then there is Bob Odenkirk, who has done better things
(Mr. Show, Breaking Bad) but is always a delight to see on screen in any
incarnation. Final mention of the two nephews played by Tim Driscroll and Devin Ratray.
They gather some of the best laughs by just sitting next to each other and
grinning. It's good stuff.
I expect the Academy will love this movie way out of proportion because
it is about an old white person, which coincidentally is the majority
demographic of the Academy. I bet they all like it even more because it is in black
and white even though there is no particular reason for it. The last movie
Alexander Payne made about an old white person was “The Descendants.” That won
the Best Adapted Screenplay Oscar, which was just a really terrible thing to happen. I
have the sneaking suspicion that the writing for this one will be similarly
nominated. It’s good writing, but it’s not great because it can't be. There isn't the ambition that is generally needed to make the writing great. Here’s hoping that it at least won’t win anything.
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