Robot and Frank supposedly takes place a few indeterminate
years in the future, but it might as well be taking place on a different
planet. Director Jake Schreier doesn’t go overboard with the sci-fi elements –
in fact, the only thing at first that would suggest anything futuristic is a
tiny car driving by in the background – but he uses behavior to create an
otherworldly context for his drama.
Frank Langella plays Frank, an aging thief slowly
going senile living alone in a big, comfortable house. He’s got nothing to do
except visit the local library, where lovely librarian Susan Sarandon informs
him (and us) that Frank is the place’s only customer. Meanwhile, Frank’s
hippy-ish daughter (Liv Tyler) and his yuppy-ish son (James Marsden) worry
about him in their own little ways. While she’s off traveling and doing good in
Turkmenistan, the son gets Frank a robot helper (voiced by Peter Sarsgaard, who
should do more robot voices) to cater to his needs. Frank’s reluctant at first,
but sure enough he starts to bond with his machine friend. Before we know it,
he’s using the robot to help plan an elaborate robbery of his neighbors.
Everything in Robot and Frank feels a little off. The
characters don’t quite behave like real people. The film’s milieu, even though
it seems like a fairly normal privileged suburb, doesn’t quite seem real. That
sounds like a bad thing, but Schreier makes it work: His film regards its
universe with the same low-key, bemused contempt that Frank does. And every
once in a while we recognize little moments of recognizable behavior – it’s
almost as if humanity itself is becoming quietly forgotten. Like we’re slipping
into the same fog as Frank’s fallible memories.
I don’t know whether to call Robot and Frank a comedy or a
drama. It’s certainly got its funny moments, but it’s also a staid, quiet
little film that at times feels like a one-man show. Langella has a lot to do
here, but not a lot of emoting; his
Frank is a distant figure, and while the slow onset of dementia hasn’t
completely taken him over, we can sense him floating away, ever so softly and with a
minimum of fuss.
And yet the film never quite holds the weight of a drama. It certainly has myriad opportunities for symbolism and sentimentality, but Schreier and writer Christopher Ford keep things loose and airy. Thus, what the film loses out on pathos, and maybe even some narrative drive, it gains in honesty. It also affords the right to spring one quietly devastating emotional twist on us late in the final act – one of those out-of-the-blue moments that in a more cloying film would have been the last straw, but here makes everything shine a little bit brighter.
And yet the film never quite holds the weight of a drama. It certainly has myriad opportunities for symbolism and sentimentality, but Schreier and writer Christopher Ford keep things loose and airy. Thus, what the film loses out on pathos, and maybe even some narrative drive, it gains in honesty. It also affords the right to spring one quietly devastating emotional twist on us late in the final act – one of those out-of-the-blue moments that in a more cloying film would have been the last straw, but here makes everything shine a little bit brighter.
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ReplyDeleteRobot and Frank is a 2012 American science fiction comedy-drama film directed by Jake Schreier. It stars Frank Langella, Susan Sarandon, James Marsden, Liv Tyler and Peter Sarsgaard. The film centers around an aging man named Frank who is given a robot companion to help him with his daily life. This robot soon becomes an important part of Frank's life, as it helps him to remember things he has forgotten and assists him in his everyday tasks.
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