Director: Dan Fogelman
Format: Multiple Formats, Blu-ray, Ultraviolet, Color, Widescreen
Language: English (Dolby Digital 5.1), English (DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1)
Subtitles: French, Spanish
Subtitles for the Hearing Impaired: English
Region: All Regions
Aspect Ratio: 2.40:1
Number of discs: 2
Rated: R (Restricted)
Studio: Universal Studios
Release Date: June 30, 2015
Digital Copy Expiration Date: May 2, 2016
Danny Collins is a crowd-pleasing film,
as it should be. Though the premise of the film may have been loosely based on
a real event, writer and first-time director Dan Fogelman approaches the
material with a mild genre mentality. This makes for extremely predictable and
passively entertaining film, however safe and unimpressive the experience
feels. There may be a great film in here, but this feels like the watered down
version of that movie.
Fogelman
apparently had Al Pacino in mind when he wrote the screenplay, and the aged
star gives his most charismatic performance in years. There are moments that
Pacino hams it up a bit much, some of which is a result of the screenplay’s
contrivances, but the film ends up feeling more like a success because of how
enjoyable the entire cast is to watch. Aside from Pacino in the title role,
Danny Collins also gives us the opportunity to watch Annette Bening, Jennifer
Garner and Christopher Plummer banter like the best of them against. Bobby
Cannavale also co-stars as the rock star’s long-lost son.
The basic
premise of the movie is that aging 1970s rock star Danny Collins decides to
give up his lavish lifestyle and tour in order to take a trip to meet his son
and family. This sudden change comes after his manager (Plummer) gives him the
gift of a long-lost letter from John Lennon to the young singer in the 1970s.
This 40-year-old letter inspires Collins to fly to New Jersey and take up semi-permanent
residence in a small franchise hotel managed by Mary Sinclair (Bening). Melissa
Benoist (“Supergirl”) plays the behind the desk, Josh Peck is the valet
attendant, and Nick Offerman even has a small role at the beginning, just so
that Fogelman has scattered every inch of the movie with likeable and
attractive people.
When Collins
checks into the hotel and makes his first attempt at meeting his son for the
first time, the film falls into a predictable routine. The twists in the
narrative only fall deeper into the abyss of cliché emotional storylines, saved
only by a steady cast. Maybe Fogelman did know what he was doing as a director,
though it was only necessary to make up for the shortcomings of his own
screenplay. The emotional payoff doesn’t feel fully earned, but the film is
charming enough for this to be dismissed.
The Blu-ray
combo pack includes a DVD and Digital HD copy of the film, along with a couple
special features. The brief collection of extras includes a generic making-of
featurette and a look at the album covers created to show the progression of
Collins’ fabricated career.
Entertainment Value:
8/10
Quality of
Filmmaking: 6/10
Historical
Significance: 4/10
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