From the daily archives:

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

The Good Heart

The Good Heart (Director: Dagur Kári): I’ve long been a fan of Icelandic cinema, and when I caught Dagur Kári’s first film Nói Albínói (review) at TIFF in 2003, I made a note to keep an eye out for his work. The Good Heart is Kári’s first film in four years, and also his first in English.

Brian Cox plays Jacques, the can­tan­kerous owner of a dive bar in one of New York City’s gri­miest neigh­bour­hoods. In hos­pital after his fifth coronary, he meets Lucas (Paul Dano), a home­less young man who’s recov­ering from a failed sui­cide attempt. Looking for someone to take over the bar when he finally suc­cumbs, he takes Lucas in and begins teaching him the very par­tic­ular rules by which he gov­erns his busi­ness: no new cus­tomers, don’t get too friendly with the reg­u­lars, and espe­cially, no women. You can see where this is headed.

Lucas and Jacques get along fab­ulously until late one rainy night when April (Isild Le Besco), a dis­traught stew­ardess who’s afraid of flying, walks into the bar. She begs Lucas to let her stay, and he does, but as soon as Jacques finds out he’s furious. Lucas is pulled first one way and then the other; he impuls­ively mar­ries April at her request, and then throws her out at Jacques’ request. He’s mad­den­ingly passive throughout, and by the time the story reaches its super­fi­cially sur­prising and yet essen­tially pre­dict­able end, we still know very little about these characters.

For instance, there is almost no dia­logue between Lucas and April, so their sudden mar­riage seems ludicrous. The char­acter arc of Jacques is crudely simple as well: of course, he has a heart of gold, even if it’s failing. The bar’s reg­ular pat­rons are a bunch of quirky car­toons, com­pletely unre­lated to real people. Despite some funny stretches (including a gag involving broc­coli), the dia­logue seems sketched in, as does the plot. The film checks off a number of “indie” boxes, but fails to rise above the trite and mediocre script. Cox and Dano are fine actors, but each seems to be playing a char­acter they’ve played many times before, while the lovely Le Besco is com­pletely wasted. I did like the use of a washed-out colour palette, and the bar set is remark­ably authentic, but overall, I found myself disappointed.

Reviewer Jay Kerr’s Take: The Good Heart is a decent film but I found it to be a tad ped­es­trian. None of the roles are par­tic­u­larly chal­len­ging for any of the actors involved and the plot is a little thin in places. There is little to no back-story to any of the char­ac­ters which is frus­trating at times. Things happen that seem absurd — Lucas and April get mar­ried on a whim and then Lucas kicks her out of the bar when she flirts with a customer.

Most of the action takes place in the bar which takes on a char­acter of its own. The dim lighting and moldy walls provide the per­fect set­ting for this story. There are sev­eral inter­esting char­ac­ters at the bar and some of the dia­logue is quite funny but overall, it falls short of the mark for me. Apparently Brian Cox doesn’t view his own work, in which case he isn’t missing much by not watching The Good Heart.

6/10(6/10)

{ Comments on this entry are closed }