BEFORE: Originally this film was going to be much closer to the start of the romance chain, as it was just one more film with Isabella Rossellini in it - but I moved some things around to get that Bridget Jones film to land on Valentine's Day, and that meant I had to move THIS film to link things together once I flipped a section of the chain around. The original plan was to link from "The Last Five Years" to "A Family Affair" via Lily LaGravenese, which would have made "The Tale" the 14th film, and geez but that would be a terrible film to use as a V-day centerpiece. Maybe with "Roger Dodger" moving into February then the 14th film would have been "New in Town", and that's a bit better, but still... I stand by the decision to flip that section around, it just felt right - and by tomorrow I'll be back on the path as originally planned. It's fine, because there's so much crossover among this year's films because the same people tend to appear in rom-coms and such. There still might be some tweaking I need to do along the way, there's one film I may want to add and one I may want to drop and save for next year.
So Liza Koshy carries over from "A Family Affair" and Ms. Rossellini is back for one night only and now it's a five-way tie for the most appearances for the year. Still such a long way to go, given what usually happens in the Doc Block it wouldn't be weird if Johnny Carson or Paul McCartney won the year again.
Let's check in again with TCM's "31 Days of Oscar" programming, this will be the line-up for Day 9, Saturday 2/21, the theme is "Oscar Goes Big (Epics)":
7:30 am "Ben-Hur" (1959)
11:30 am "Lawrence of Arabia" (1962)
3:30 pm "Cleopatra" (1963)
8:00 pm "Gone With the Wind" (1939)
12:00 am "Doctor Zhivago" (1965)
3:30 am "Quo Vadis" (1951)
So this is what it comes down to, we're just putting movies together because they're super long? I mean, I know you guys have a lot of space to fill and time to kill, but "long" is not a theme. Can we go back to linking films by actors? It's so much more fun. Anyway, I've seen 5 out of 6, I never got around to "Quo Vadis", but this has GOT to improve my stats. Now I've seen 44 out of 100, so duh, that's 44%. An improvement, yes, but only by a few points. C'est la vie, and if you haven't seen "Lawrence of Arabia" or "Doctor Zhivago" then go for it, just have a bunch of snacks and drinks standing by, it's going to be a very LONG Saturday if you're playing catch-up on TCM.
THE PLOT: When a college sophomore goes on a date with an older man, she finds that he doesn't live up to the guy she has been flirting with over texts.
AFTER: I've got another tough one tonight, because it's all about the perils of dating again, in this modern, post-Epstein world and this one ends up making the same point about relationships as "Woman of the Hour", namely that a man's biggest fear is that a woman will laugh at him, while a woman's biggest fear is that a man will kill her. It's not right, it's not fair, but it's where we find ourselves. Look, dating in general is a bit like that sign that hangs in a factory that says "X number of days since the last workplace accident". You can date someone for a week or a month or a year, but when things don't work out or you get your heart broken, that sign resets to zero and you start counting again. Really the only way to avoid this is to never date at all, it's the "Wargames" method, which one character here actually uses - Margot's ex-boyfriend reveals that he's not gay at all, he's asexual. He tried gay and it was even weirder for him than being straight, so he just stopped.
But Margot feels the need to keep going, despite her feminist friend Taylor's efforts to get her to stop, too. (Taylor gives Margot so much anti-relationship advice, one has to wonder here if Taylor would prefer to be dating Margot herself, but this plot thread is not followed.) Together they represent the two schools of thought - continue to meet people and date and put yourself at risk, or become so careful and paranoid about relationships that you basically shut the whole system down and make no progress at all. Experience creates wisdom, however creating experience can be hazardous - so it just comes down to whether you're more comfortable being alone or trying to make progress in finding a partner. Maybe that's more like job hunting, because you constantly have to decide if you're comfortable with your job or if you need to take steps to find a new job, which would mean leaving the job you have. Yes, of course some people moonlight on the side, especially if their main job isn't giving them everything they need or want.
Margot attends college and seems to be majoring in some kind of anthropology or applied science, and she also works in a movie theater. Well, that's something I know about, the movie theater thing - she works concessions and so there's some interaction with the film geeks, and she notices Robert because he orders both popcorn and Red Vines, an unusual combo. Hell, I've seen people pour their m&m's over their popcorn, but you know, that makes some sense. Anyone who eats red licorice must be a psychopath. Anyway, Robert doesn't really ask for her phone number, he kind of demands it - that's probably red flag #2, and there are really a LOT more to come. This is pretty much a movie filled with red flags - Robert is 33 and dating a 20-year old, that's another one. He also claims to be a "cat person", which is not a red flag if it's true, but if it's something he's saying about himself just to gain someone's trust, then it's a definite red flag.
He also invites Margot out to see a movie in the same theater where she works, but that's very inconsiderate. If you work in a movie theater, you just don't want to go there on a date or on your day off, you want to be far away from there. Just saying. But why can't Margot SAY, "Hey, I don't want to go to my workplace as a customer..." or "Hey, sorry I'm not into Star Wars" or "Hey, I don't want to see the fifth movie in a 11-movie series" or she could even say, "Hey, let's see one of the other movies playing at the same cinema, BLANK would be a more romantic film even..." But I recognize the difficulties of being in a relationship and not wanting to impose your will on the other person, if you think it's tough to pick a movie to watch together try figuring out what to have for dinner, that's another nightmare minefield, eating in, take-out, it doesn't matter - it's just hard for two people to land on the same thing. Eventually one person has to drive that bus, and one person has to be the passenger and eat something they're not crazy about or you just both decide to eat what you want, even if that's two different things. What I'm saying is, in the interest of not driving each other crazy, have a lot of solo meals on hand, and don't take it personally if the other person doesn't want to eat the same thing as you that night.
Sex can also be a very awkward thing - and Margot continues to "imagine" things going different ways before they really happen. This keeps the audience here kind of on their toes, because we never really know if something is happening for real or just in her imagination. So is THIS the scene where we find out that Robert is a serial killer, or is it just another intrusive thought? Jesus, is this what it's like to be a woman dating someone, just always waiting for the other shoe to drop and the truth about this weird guy to reveal itself? It's exhausting. But Margot continues to ignore all the red flags and eventually there's an awkward kiss, so she of course texts Taylor to ask if you can teach somebody to be a better kisser. Well, sure you CAN but that would involve having an awkward conversation about the awkward kiss, and that's so awkward that she never gets around to doing it, so the awkward kisses continue. And then because she can't have the similar conversation about sex, you guessed it, there's sex that's so awkward and clumsy that Margot is forced to have an imagined conversation with another version of herself who is standing in the room and watching the awkward sex happen.
Harrison Ford is apparently to blame for this, along with social media. Ford because he played two of the coolest movie characters of all time, Han Solo and Indiana Jones, and neither one is very good with women. Were you surprised in Episode VII that Han and Leia were no longer together? Really, you shouldn't have been because he's not a character who's good at commitment, and honestly neither is Harrison Ford - Indiana Jones also had a different girl in every film and probably cheated on each one, too. And yet THIS is who film geeks have chosen as their idol, their role model where relationships are concerned. Umm, choose better? Social media is thrown into the blame blender because we all act differently when we text or post than we do in person. Humblebragging when we post is a common enough thing, because we all just don't want to be known, we want to be envied. And you can't really express tone in an e-mail or in a text, so things can easily be mis-interpreted or confused. Therefore we could read texts with the tone or meaning that we want, rather than the one that was intended.
So yeah, a lot of things go wrong here just because Margot doesn't want to hurt Robert's feelings. Taylor then sends a break-up text for her because she couldn't bring herself to do it. Everything seems OK until Robert then demands some kind of closure, or at least an explanation regarding what went wrong or what he could have done better. STILL she can't bring herself to give him any constructive criticism, even though that may be exactly what he might need to hear. He's not going to get BETTER with her or with someone else unless he understands that he was inconsiderate on some level, personally or sexually. But, to be fair, Margot is just as guilty when it came to being self-centered, like she never asked Robert what he did for a living and she took a long time to ask him how old he was, stuff like that. Instead she was distracted by the lack of cats in his house, after he said he was a "cat person". Her friend Taylor's experience with a man in her feminist online group pretending to be a woman led her to doubt everything that Robert said about his own life, and if he's lying about something small, what else is he lying about?
There is a perfectly reasonable explanation for everything - like that stray dog that Margot finds at the beginning of the film and tries to bring into her dorm. Later she sees the same dog at Robert's house, and this leads her to conclude that Robert has been stalking her for weeks. But is it the same dog, or just the same breed? How closely did she examine the dog, at either time? A lot of dogs look alike, and the second time she was in a more panicked situation. Also even if it WERE the same dog, and I'm not saying it was, what would that mean? How would Robert sending a stray dog into her life bring them together? What was supposed to happen, she would find a dog tag or electronic chip or something that would lead her to bring the dog to his house? And then what, she would just start dating the guy who lost his dog? None of that really makes sense, but then again, him having a dog and calling himself a "cat person" doesn't really makes sense either, but neither does that make him a serial killer or bad person. Maybe that really was his dog and maybe the dog was really lost for a while and then found its way back home, but we'll never know, and that doesn't make him a bad person either.
So everything is kind of doubled here, because we see Margot's imagined and intrusive thoughts, there are scenes where she imagines him as a serial killer and other scenes where she imagines him as a perfectly normal guy. It's worth noting that the actor who plays Robert appeared in the movie "Saturday Night" playing two roles, Jim Henson and Andy Kaufman. Sure, two tall guys with kind of the same face, and one of them was crazy in a good way and the other was maybe crazy in a crazy way. Scratch that, they were both pretty crazy because I worked with animators for thirty years and I can tell you that the only people more demented and messed up are puppeteers. I wouldn't date a puppet person, that's all I'm saying, I don't think they're right in the head. Same goes for movies, you don't HAVE to watch the same thing all the time, I can't even tell you the last movie my wife and I watched together, but it might be "The Greatest Night in Pop". No, probably it was the "Yacht Rock" doc.
Anyway, this is another example of "reductio ad absurdum", where a story starts with a simple premise and then keeps asking, "what else could possibly go wrong?" until the entire situation is a hopeless and ridiculous disaster from which there is no recovery. If either character had been able to walk away from the situation, and there were ample opportunities to do so, then things just wouldn't have gotten so out of control. It's something to think about the next time you get your heart broken, how much worse it could have been - sometimes, if you can walk away from it with your dignity intact, then you're ahead of the game, even if it doesn't feel like it.
Directed by Susanna Fogel (director of "Life Partners" and "The Spy Who Dumped Me")
Also starring Emilia Jones (last seen in "Youth"), Nicholas Braun (last seen in "Dream Scenario"), Geraldine Viswanathan (last seen in "Thunderbolts"), Isabella Rossellini (last seen in "Cousins"), Hope Davis (last seen in "The Phoenician Scheme"), Christopher Shyer (last seen in "The Core"), Josh Andres Rivera (last seen in "The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes"), Melissa Lehman, Isaac Cole Powell (last seen in "Dear Evan Hansen"), Jeremy Gill, Kyle Selig, Liza Colon-Zayas (last seen in "All Is Bright"), Donald Elise Watkins (last seen in "Fly Me to the Moon"), Fred Melamed (last seen in "Lying and Stealing"), Camille Umoff (last seen in "Mean Girls" (2024), Sammy Bronco, Max Jenkins, Zachary Mooren, Joanne Joella, John Scherer, Pearl Sun, Michael Gandolfini (last seen in "Landscape with Invisible Hand")
with archive footage of Carrie Fisher (last seen in "Music by John Williams"), Harrison Ford (ditto), Sean Young (last seen in "Cousins")
RATING: 5 out of 10 phone charging cords
