Saturday, January 9, 2016

Movie: Joy (2015)**

I watched this because it was nominated for two Golden Globes in the Best Motion Picture – Comedy or Musical and Best Performance By an Actress In a Motion Picture – Comedy or Musical categories.  
I like David O. Russell's work. I don't always agree that it is award-worthy, but it is almost always entertaining and worth the time it takes to watch. Joy is not award-worthy, in my opinion, and I would list it on the bottom of a best to worsts list of David O. Russell work.

The character, Joy, is a divorced mother of two, struggling to take care of her life, her family and extended family's lives, when suddenly, she decided to pursue her childhood dream of creating something. She comes up with an idea, then into the business world she goes and finds a different struggle to overcome.

The film Joy just didn't flow. It felt at times to be speeding up, so much is happening and progress is being made. Then...BAM! All of a sudden we're trudging through mud. And I use mud to illustrate another point: This movie didn't clearly get across what it was. Is it supposed to be motivational to women with ideas who feel weighed down by life? Is is supposed to be funny? Am I supposed to relate to Joy?

Another question that wasn't clarified by the film is why all of a sudden did Joy decide to go after her childhood dreams? It can't just be because she “had it up to here” with the family and living situation. That was clearly going on for quite some time. What, along with “having it up to here, ” makes Joy grow some cajones, take control, then suddenly castrate herself?

The David O. Russell-style flashbacks shine light on a few things. For example, we learn when she started being creative as a young girl, and for how long she knew her close friends, but those flashbacks also generate more questions. For example, I wondered what happened to the relationship between Joy and her half-sister? How did her mother managed to stay in bed and watch soap operas all the time? What went wrong in her marriage?

You know, it's funny. My best friend was just recounting a conversation he was having with someone else about how without a good backstory you would miss the point. His example was The Royal Tenenbaums. If you didn't see it from the beginning where the dad was doing a great job at being a bad father, then you would just think the adult versions of the Tenenbaum children were simply being ungrateful assholes. I think David O. Russell failed to give Joy a good enough backstory.

Also, the movie ran too long. There was to much time spent on scenes and characters that just didn't matter in the end. This is the only mention of Jennifer Lawrence. There.

I'm giving Joy two stars **. I kind of want to watch it again to see if there's something I missed, but I don't really want to go through that, again. If this popped up while flipping channels and I couldn't find anything else or if I just wanted something on while I cleaned, then I'd probably watch it, again.

Golden Globes
Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture - Comedy or Musical

1 comment:

  1. My cousin was just saying how she was interested in watching this and I said that I cant watch anymore of Jennifer Lawrence for a while seeing as she ranked as number one and two for movies in my worse of 2015 (Hunger Games Mockingjay 2 and Serena). That director loves using her and sees something in her that I just can not.

    ReplyDelete

All comments are moderated. Even my own.