BLACKBIRD – “Sweet and sentimental, but lacks true emotional depth”
RATING
DIRECTOR
Roger Michell
STARRING
- Kate Winslet as Jennifer
- Mia Wasikowska as Anna
- Susan Sarandon as Lily
- Sam Neill as Paul
- Rainn Wilson as Michael
- Bex Taylor-Klaus as Chris
- Lindsay Duncan as Elizabeth
SYNOPSIS
Lily and Paul summon their loved ones to their beach house for one final gathering after Lily decides to end her long battle with ALS on her own terms. The couple is planning a loving weekend complete with holiday traditions, but the mood becomes strained when unresolved issues surface between Lily and her daughters.
REVIEW SUMMARY
Sure, Blackbird is sweet and sentimental, but it lacks true emotional depth. It’s no fault of the actors though, as everyone here does their part to try and make it work (it’s mainly Sarandon and Winslet’s movie, however). The issue is the story, as it plays out in rather contrived ways, especially in the third act. Things are fairly stilted from the get-go though, as it’s almost as if it were staged like a theatrical play. The subject matter (a sick family matriarch having one last hurrah with her family before she ends things on her own accord) is admittedly tackled with tenderness, making for a couple of touching moments, but not nearly enough. For a movie of this nature, the emotion needed to be genuine and cranked to 11. Instead, it’s tepid and frustratingly mediocre. The cast (and audience) deserve better!
BOX OFFICE TOP 5
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The Best Christmas Pageant Ever
$5.4 million
7.5
The Wild Robot
$4.3 million