City
Island
Review - Matt Mungle
City
Island is popping up at film festivals all
over the country and if you are lucky enough
to have a theater in your area that runs
indie-art-house flicks then keep your eye
out for this one. In this age of explosions
and agenda driven dramas it is nice to find
a quirky comedy that shines a spot light
on the American family unit in all its dysfunctional
glory. We all have our issues but sometimes
when we see them on a grandiose scale it
makes them easier to face and to talk about.
Vince (Andy Garcia) and Joyce (Julianna
Margulies) Rizzo are a married couple with
two kids living the blue collar life in
a small community at the edge of New York
City. They have a daughter in college and
a teenaged son trying to come to terms with
his own hormonal issues. The problem is
that they never talk to each other. Sure
there is a lot of yelling and condescension
but they are each living separate lives;
fearful of sharing any of their faults,
dreams, or concerns with one another. This
all leads to funny but realistic moments
of deception, assumptions and chaos.
This film is wonderfully written with a
pace that fits perfect with the working
family. As you watch Vince and Joyce go
about their day to day lives you can see
that they genuinely love each other but
along the way they have forgotten what it
means to trust. You automatically engage
with them and want to see them work out
their issues. Both Garcia and Margulies
give A-1 performances and you immediately
separate them from their past roles and
believe them fully as this bickering Bronx
couple.
The supporting cast also lends nicely to
this film with genuine style. Emily Mortimer
plays Molly; a friend of Vince’s and
someone that he can share things with. Mortimer
is always grounded and pure in the characters
she plays; an attribute that mixes well
here. Most of the comedy comes from Ezra
Miller who plays Vince Jr. He is sharp and
even though his character is given some
very strange habits he seems comfortable
and at ease. Steven Strait rounds out the
cast as the hunky parolee that Vince offers
a place to stay. The irony that the ex-con
is the only stable one in the mix adds to
the humor of the casting.
City Island is rated PG-13 for sexual content,
smoking and language. Due to some of the
content and sexual themes involving Vince
Jr, I would say that most parents would
be more comfortable allowing their 16 and
up teens to see this. Plus it is more geared
for the married folks who like to see other
couples who go through the same issues they
do. It is refreshing and makes the humor
more relatable. I give it 4 out of 5 casting
calls. Wonderfully written and beautifully
delivered, it was truly a film worth seeing.
So says Matt Mungle.
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