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House of D
(2005)
Starring:
Anton Yelchin, Tea Leoni, David Duchovny, et al.
Director: David Duchovny
Rating: PG-13
Distributor:
Lions Gate Films
Release Date:
04.15.05
Review
Posted:
04.22.05
By
George Schmidt
A Sort of
Homecoming
David Duchovny is one of my favorite contemporary actors and has
been stigmatized by his iconic TV role as FBI agent Fox Mulder,
believer of the incredibly unbelievable , on the late, great "The
X-Files" and makes a gallant attempt to shrug off his alter ego for a
smaller, more personal project in hopes to be taken as a serious actor
capable of being versatile. In this, his big-screen directorial debut
he makes a decent effort.
As an American expat artist living in Paris, Tom Warsaw (Duchovny)
faces some skeletons in his closet and decides to tell his gorgeous
wife Coralie (Magali Amadei) and his son Odell (Harold Cartier) on
Odell's birthday, just what they are, in the middle of the night
awakening some irate neighbors. Despite the late evening disturbance
Tom begins to tell the story of how he grew up in
New
York City's Greenwich Village and how the age of 13 truly became his
coming of age.
Flashback to 1973 and 13 year old Tommy (Yelchin, late of HEARTS IN
ATLANTIS) has a lot on his plate: his forthcoming puberty blues is
running parallel to the recent death of his father leaving him with
his manic-depressive mother (Leoni, Mrs. Duchovny, in a competent
turn) whose melancholy emotional roller-coaster and clinging vine
addiction to sleeping pills only adds to Tommy's dilemma of not having
any role models let alone family but does have a best friend, a
mentally retarded janitor named Pappass (Robin Williams wisely not
going overboard in a remarkably restrained and decent performance) who
works at the Catholic school he attends and assists in an after-school
job as a meat delivery boy for a local butcher. When not palling
with Pappass Tommy seeks refuge in the titular edifice that was an
actual detention house for women on
10th St.
and 6th Avenue where the prisoners were able to shout from their
barred windows to the passersby and vice versea. It is here where
Tommy encounters Lady Bernadette (soulful singer Erykah Badu in a
surprisingly strong supporting turn) who counsels the young adolescent
about the birds and bees when Tommy develops a crush on the young
Melissa (Williams' real-life daughter Zelda, a chip off-the-old block,
in a very natural film debut) who lives on the Upper East Side.
The storyline is quasi-biographical according to Duchovny - who I met
at the opening day screening in New York and is as low-key and
self-deprecatingly funny as you would guess from his talk-show
appearances and interviews - and has the feel of a latter-day John
Cheever novella (Duchovny also penned the screenplay) where the
eccentric characters and colorful neighborhoods within neighborhoods
come alive in a very vivid naturalistic way (Duchovny truly does
capture the era with smartly chosen '70s pop/rock songs as well as the
sublime production design by Lester Cohen, Ellen Lutter's period
costumes that do not caricature the times and veteran cinematographer
Michael Chapman's assuredly pristine cinematography.
The acting overall is very good particularly the talented young
Yelchin who has a very soft, trembly voice that makes it more intimate
to actually LISTEN to what he says and his character may be a bit of a
wise-ass but he's not a know-it-all troublemaking jerk like most teens
are depicted. Williams balances his sweet-natured Pappass with just
enough vulnerability without being too cloying and has some nice
moments towards the end of the film. Duchovny has a deft touch
especially with his actors - an almost Eastwoodian touch in the sense
that he has not rushed his players but let them flesh out their roles,
even the smaller ones by such wonderful veteran character actors such
as Margolis as Pappass' alcoholic father, Langella as the
passive/aggressive priest/instructor and Jones as a flashy pimp.
His pacing is a bit rocky with some odd - choices in editing (one
sequence after a school dance when Tommy returns home to his angry
mother is a tad off) but otherwise is straightforward in his
storytelling.
When Tom finishes his story to his family he's encouraged to return
home (to give away anymore of the plot would ruin the viewing but
let's say it's bittersweet) to rekindle his youth and find out just
who he is.
Duchovny should be proud of this labor of love that shows he is a
talented artist who has a lot to say and his filmmaking debut may not
be grand but is definitely noteworthy for the next level of being The
Artist Formerly Known As Mulder.
Film
Rating:
κκκ (out of
4)
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