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The Private Lives Of Pippa Lee (2009)
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The Private Lives Of Pippa Lee
Release Date: 10th December 2009
Language: English
Rating: G
Genre: Drama
Starring: Keanu Reeves, Alan Arkin, Robin Wright Penn, Winona Ryder, Mike Binder
[full cast]
Directed by: Rebecca Miller
Local Distributor: Golden Village Pictures
 
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Movie Plot Back to top

At 50, Pippa Lee positively glows with female serenity, the devoted wife of a brilliant publisher 30 years her senior, proud mother of successful twins and a lovely and adored friend and neighbor. But when her husband spontaneously decides that they should leave New York for a retirement home as a "pre-emptive strike against decrepitude," and has an affair with someone even younger than she is, Pippa finds her beatific persona unraveling in alarming ways. The truth is, the gracious woman of the present day has seen more than her fair share of the wild side. She has finally found love and security in a family of her own. And now, that cozy world, too, is in danger.

Cinema Online's Review Back to top

Just like the crème brûlee she heats up so effortlessly with a butane torch in the movie, the titular heroine Pippa Lee (played by a faultless but helpless Robin Wright Penn) is sweet but burnt all the same by a source material that is either too quirky and personal for commercial big-screen interests or plain unlikeable, despite having an embarrassment of stars to drive it.

No surprise then that this drama hasn't even secured wide distribution stateside and instead got itself washed up on our shores first!

It's a film with many odd facts. How many movies do you know in which the author of the book is also the director? Rebecca Miller ("Ballad Of Jack And Rose") has said in interviews how the recession has caused box office players to be wary of quirky dramas. The true question really is whether the movie is so hard to sell or is the story actually too hard to buy?

Unfortunately it's the latter. Beautiful Robin Wright Penn may still have that screen appeal since her Jenny Curran last asked to be groped by Tom Hanks in "Forrest Gump" but she's asked to play a character so schizophrenic and uneaxamined that it turns fatal to the flick. She's a fiftysomething housewife moving into the so-dubbed Wrinklesbury (retiree community) with her much older, ailing, publisher husband (a wonderful Alan Arkin, "Little Miss Sunshine") who once had a psycho ex-wife played by Monica Bellucci ("Shoot 'Em Up"). Flashes from her past inform us that she was a troubled 16-year-old emo goth (impressive turn by "Gossip Girl" Blake Lively) who had colourful family in a speed-addicted mum (Mario Bello, "The Mummy: Tomb Of The Dragon Emperor"), a lesbian aunt (Robin Weigert, TV's "Deadwood") and her wild lover (Julianne Moore, "Hannibal"). There's also room for Keanu Reeves as a sensitive but odd Christian with a giant Jesus tattoo on his chest and Wynona Ryder as a cry-baby of a young wife.

As many critics note, this movie has peculiar pacing, uneven dialogue and also a messy visual style. More importantly, it doesn't cut it as a mainstream crowd-pleaser or a critically-directed arthouse piece either. Even if something bizarre about this film turns it into a sleeper hit on DVD, this reviewer insists that Pippa Lee's lives, whatever they're about, are best kept private.