Actors: Julianne Moore, Alec Baldwin, Kristen Stewart, Kate Bosworth, Hunter Parrish
Directors: Richard Glatzer, Wash Westmoreland
Format: Blu-ray, Widescreen
Language: English
Number of discs: 1
Rated: PG-13
Studio: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Release Date: May 12, 2015
Run Time: 101 minutes
There
is an irritating trend occurring at the Academy Awards each year; the films
that earn Best Actor/Actress nominations and wins have the tendency to walk
away with no other awards. One less cynical than I am may assume that this is
the Academy’s way of spreading out the accolades, but I see it as the film
industry’s way of pandering to the award season with films that are singularly
performance pieces. These tend to be indulgent roles which focus on little
other than showcasing the star’s acting abilities, particularly if they
gain/lose weight, drastically change their appearance in another way, or play
some type of mental/physical disability. As spectacular as Julianne Moore’s
performance in Still Alice may be,
not to mention deserving of the Best Actress Oscar she received, the film
surrounding her feels incomplete. Other characters get lost in the shuffle and
the male characters are as horribly underwritten as is typically the case of
female ones in Hollywood .
Does the feminist backlash in cinema have to come at the cost of properly
developed male roles? Can’t we have both in one film?
The film begins with a series of sequences to
show the happy and established life of linguistics professor Alice Howland (Moore ), only to spend the
remainder of the running-time watching it all fade away. Alice is diagnosed with a rare type of the
Alzheimer’s disease, causing a woman whose career is contingent upon an
understanding of communication to suddenly begin forgetting words. Her personal
life is also in danger as Alice
becomes more reliant on the help and support of those who love her. With three
grown children (Kate Bosworth, Hunter Parrish, and Kristen Stewart) and a
loving husband (Alec Baldwin), this should not be as much of a problem as the
narrative makes it. Much of the conflict in this second half of the narrative
comes from Alice ’s
husband’s unwillingness to put his illustrious medical career on hold to care
for his ailing wife. Needless to say, this role ends up feeling more discordant
than the initial set-up seemed to suggest, and Baldwin is asked to play another
flatly written husband role, not entirely dissimilar to the one he played
against last year’s Best Actress winner in Blue
Jasmine.
The remainder of
familial response tends to remain interested in the polar responses to the
disease from Alice’s two daughters, while her son is only given a single scene
sitting passively in an audience listening to Alice speak about her condition
as a show of support. Though I can’t understand or appreciate why this role was
not as fully developed as the other children, Parrish makes the most out of the
opportunity by giving one of the best performances of his career. Bosworth’s
Anna is also somewhat one-dimensional, playing the uptight daughter who manages
to make the disease as much about herself as Alice , especially when they receive news that
it is hereditary.
One of the
film’s best developed relationships comes in the form of Alice ’s
youngest daughter, Lydia
(Stewart), whose response is refreshingly different from the rest of the
family. From the beginning she is seen to be the black sheep of the successful
family, struggling with a futile acting career while her parents and siblings
have found success in high paying jobs and advancement through higher
education. Somehow this artistic sensitivity also makes her a much more ideal
candidate for empathizing with her mother, especially when all the rest have
chosen to focus on their own lives instead. Although Still Alice is a wonderful performance piece, it may have been a
more complete and developed film had this relationship taken more focus. The
screenplay often feels disjointed, utilizing many of the other characters as a
device for Alice ’s narrative, whereas the
relationship between her and Lydia
never hits a false note.
Exclusive to the
Blu-ray release are 3 deleted scenes, an interview with composer Ilan Eshkeri,
and a featurette about the approach from co-writers and directors, Wash
Westmoreland and the late Richard Glatzer. Additionally in the extras is a
behind-the-scenes featurette looking at Alzheimer’s from experts along with
cast and crew members. A Digital HD copy of the film is also included with the
Blu-ray release.
Entertainment Value:
7/10
Quality of Filmmaking:
7.5/10
Historical
Significance: 7.5/10
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