1 hr & 19 min, color, 2015
Lily
Tomlin is like a scruffy cat; she has scampered and scratched and snarled her
way through a long, exciting and distinguished career of oddball but loveable
characters. She has never had any
pretense of glamour; she has created iconic female personalities in her own
singular style with her slit-eyed countenance and her pouty lips and has won
her shaggy-tailed place in hearts for over three generations of movie, TV and
stage audiences. I am so delighted to
learn that the Screen Actors Guild is going to give her its Life Achievement
Award next January. She has earned it
many times over. And her wild,
ferocious, snappy portrayal of the title role in “Grandma” caps that career for
me, at least on the movie screen. It is
arguably her best work ever. She is a
force just about any teenager or adult would take pleasure in contending with.
Not
that the film is basically comedic. It
is not exactly a wacky farce. There are
howls to be sure, but by and large it is a serious display of raw emotion,
filtered though it be through outrageous shenanigans and confrontations that
are bracing, often funny and quite heart stirring.
The
grandmother Tomlin plays is a woman named Elle in her seventies who happens to
be a lesbian, and has had the misfortune of losing Vi, her cohabiting partner
of almost forty years, by death. At the
opening scene she is giving her college age lover of four months Olivia (Judy
Greer) her walking papers. She does it
in a very cold, dismissive tone, and it is obvious that the girl is totally
devastated as well as surprised. Elle is
crude, vulgar, foul-mouthed and almost malicious. It takes little perception to see that the
young lover is not really her enemy; this senior citizen is doing battle with
internal conditions and outward circumstances that we are yet to have
revealed. What is going on with this
woman? Could nothing but grief provoke
this kind of behavior? It may be
difficult to believe that by film’s end she will emerge as a very caring
individual. That is the wonder worked in
the perceptive and fluid screenplay by Paul Weitz, who is also the director.
Three
generations of womanhood in one family get entangled with each other. Elle and her daughter (Marcia Gay Harden)
have been on the outs for quite some time, and into the picture creeps the
teenage granddaughter Sage (Julia Garner).
The girl pays Elle a visit announcing that she is pregnant and prevails
upon Elle for money to pay for the abortion she is scheduled for later that
same day, after her boyfriend fails to come up with it. She is too ashamed and afraid to call on her
alarmist mother for help (more about her in a moment), imagining that she will
be thrown out of the house. In addition
to other problems that have made Elle’s life a torment she must inform the girl
that she is broke, but she sets out with Sage in tow through the streets of LA
to find a willing friend from whom she can borrow the money. Their circuitous journey brings Elle into
thunderous confrontations with supposed friends who either refuse to help or
are unable to. Most heartbreaking of
them is an appeal to a lover of a half century before. Sam Elliott portrays him, and he is a
forceful presence in the one scene in which he appears.
The
classic image of grandmother-hood has been stripped away before. I recall the 1979 comedy “Parenthood” in
which Diane Weist, a woman in her forties, is informed by her teenage daughter
that she is going to give birth out of wedlock sometime in the coming months. After a spell, when her shock has been
sufficiently absorbed, she contemplates what this will mean for herself. Someone spells it out for her – that she is
about to become a grandmother. Her first
reaction is resistance. She declares
that this could not possibly be true.
Me, a grandmother! Grandmothers are
matronly old ladies. They bake pies and
cakes and have their offspring’s offspring visit them as subjects would pay
homage to royalty. They do not visit;
they are visited and honored as senior citizens by the larger family. Her question to herself and all listeners is
a challenge: How can I fill that kind of role?
After all, “I was at Woodstock”.
That
moment was just a warm-up for what Tomlin gives us. Her Grandma is far from royalty of any kind
and is anything but a settled, poised and self-respecting matriarch of
wisdom. She is bitterly candid; she has
no trouble with broadside insults; she is not even averse to physical
combat. In one outrageous scene she and
Sage pay the father of Sage’s unborn baby a visit and when he tries to deny paternity,
she literally beats him up, leaving him crumpled in the floor in agony. Tact and decorum are foreign to her. But it does not take long for it to begin to
be evident that she is a fighter who will go to bat for someone she loves. And there is no sign of any patriarch
anywhere. She is a solo flyer who has
not always made the best choices for herself.
Her one night stand with a man years before resulted in her own pregnancy,
the man disappearing from her life. She
is a poet who in the wake of her lover’s death has lost touch with her muse as
well. Her path is bestrewn with
wreckage.
The
daughter, the mid-generation figure, does not appear until most of the way
through the scenario, but within minutes we see enough to understand Sage’s
fear of her that has led to her calling upon the grandmother instead. She is an equally candid,
chip-on-the-shoulder individual who despite her handsome face and neat
professional appearance looks as if she would have no trouble pecking out
somebody’s eyes. Like mother, like
daughter! Of the three women Sage
emerges as the most sane and well-tempered.
She inadvertently turns out to be the catalyst that brings mother and
grandmother to belated though cautious terms with each other. The closing moments of the film are
priceless!
But
though the three all come powerfully to life, Tomlin’s Grandma is unmistakably
in the driver’s seat all the way. While
Garner and Harden do exceptionally good work, Tomlin is given more leeway in
the script for nuance. Her Grandma’s
destiny I never ceased to regard as the most vital for me. Maybe that is because I myself am a senior
citizen faced with aging angst, with nothing left to do to help shape the lives
of growing children, even though I do not have her brash, indelicate nature or
her regret over past loves and lost labors.
Elle has layers, and they peel back one at a time to show us just how
complicated her struggling life really is and how big the heart that beats
underneath her uncouthness.
This
is a real jewel. It speaks to all of us
participants in the ongoing human comedy/drama!
It
helps, if the viewer is Pro-Choice; the movie is nothing short of that. The scene in the abortion clinic is almost a
story unto itself. About that I will
discreetly say no more. But if that
issue is not an issue for you, you are in for a treat.
To read other entries in my
blog, please consult its website:
enspiritus.blogspot.com. To learn about me consult on the website the
blog entry for August 9, 2013.
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