The
Hero ** ½ / *****
Directed
by: Brett
Haley.
Written
by: Brett
Haley & Marc Basch.
Starring:
Sam
Elliott (Lee Hayden), Laura Prepon (Charlotte Dylan), Nick Offerman (Jeremy
Frost), Krysten Ritter (Lucy Hayden), Katharine Ross (Valarie Hayden).
I fully support what seems to be
writer/director Brett Haley’s newly found mission to give older, talented
character actors and actresses lead roles in movies that treat those older
people with respect. Haley had a surprise indie hit a few years ago with I’ll
See You in My Dreams, in which Blythe Danner played a woman who has been
widowed for 20 years, and finally finds love again – but not quite in the way
you expect. What I appreciated about I’ll See You in My Dreams is that it
wasn’t one of these phony, senior citizen uplift movies that seem so popular
with people like my mother (which I don’t begrudge, but don’t really respond to
either). Haley seems to be playing with the genre in some interesting ways, but
while he avoided the clichés we are used to seeing, he didn’t really replace
them with much. That movie gave the great Sam Elliott a fine supporting role –
and I suppose Haley and Elliott liked each other, because they’ve reteamed now
for The Hero – with Elliot in the lead (this seems like a pattern for Haley –
whose next movie stars Nick Offerman – a supporting player here). It is a fine
performance by Elliott, but it’s in the center of a movie that doesn’t really
go anywhere, or have all that much to say. It’s interesting, it’s always a
pleasure to watch because of Elliot, but when it ends, you wish there was
something, anything more to the film.
In the film, Elliot plays Lee
Hayden a figure not unlike Sam Elliot – an aging actor, with an iconic voice
and mustache, who doesn’t work much anymore. He is best known for a Western –
The Hero – from 40 years ago, and in some ways has coasted on that ever since.
He’s divorced, although he’s friendly with his ex-wife (Elliot’s real life
wife, Katherine Ross – always good to see her, and perhaps Haley can create a
vehicle for her) but he doesn’t much talk to or see their daughter, Lucy
(Krysten Ritter). He has one friend – Jeremy (Offerman) his one time TV
co-star, and now pot dealer – the two get stoned, and watch Buster Keaton (not
a bad way to spend the day to be honest with you). It’s at Jeremy’s where he
meets Charlotte (Laura Prepon) – a stand-up comedian decades Lee’s junior, who
(I think, probably coincidentally) not unlike his daughter, although no one
mentions this – and they start seeing each other. What Lee doesn’t tell her –
or anyone, at least not right away – is that he has pancreatic cancer – and
probably not much longer to live.
Elliot is always an intriguing
screen presence – and in recent years, that has been used well in supporting
roles. Everyone knows Elliot – if not for being the Narrator in The Big
Lebowski – than as someone else in any of his other nearly 100 screen roles. He
always seems utterly at ease in his own skin, comfortable and confident. It’s
interesting to see him in this role, playing an actor who gives off that same
vibe, but then peaking behind the curtain a little bit, and seeing the
insecurity behind that. The film, like I’ll See You in My Dreams, plays with a
few ideas that we would normally see in a film like this – first, Lee mounting
one last movie himself, and then getting another crack at stardom in a bigger
movie – before swerving away from them.
I do think though, that
unfortunately, The Hero does more fully embrace the clichés that I’ll See You
in My Dreams didn’t. Prepon’s Charlotte is a thinly written character, so the
whole creepy May-December romance never really feels real, as you have no idea
why she’s interested in him – or why, beyond sex, he is interested in her
(Prepon also has one stand-up comedy scene, in which she doesn’t seem
convincing at – although the movie does her no favors by forcing her to follow
BOTH Ali Wong and Carmen Esposito). We also know that we will eventually get a
big scene between Lee and Lucy – but as much as Ritter gives it, the scene
doesn’t quite click in the way it should.
The film does look good –
deliberately evoking old Westerns at points, and Elliot is such a pleasure to
watch that the film really does work a lot better than it should. That doesn’t
really mean that the film is good though. I want Haley to continue to make
movies like I’ll See You in My Dreams and The Hero – movies that give great
actors a chance to stretch a little in lead roles, later in life. I just want
those movies to be better.
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