52 Films by Women Vol 5. 14. A BEAUTIFUL DAY IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD (Director: Marielle Heller)
At time of writing
(February 8th, 2020) in earnings, Little Women adapted
and directed by Greta Gerwig, has passed the $100 million mark at the US box
office. This is a big deal, since films without a major star in the leading
role or not based on a franchise with a loyal fan base rarely reach this total.
Little Women joins Hustlers as two
films directed by women that have earned over $100 million on their initial
cinema release in the US in the twelve-month period beginning September 1st,
2019. When five films directed by women reach this total in a twelve-month
period, the commercial test would have been passed. Women directors would have proved
themselves just as capable as men of delivering box-office, ‘must see’
entertainment. The next landmark will be for two women or more to be nominated
by their peers as Best Director at the Oscars in the same year.
Tom Rothman,
Chairman of Sony Pictures Entertainment Motion Pictures Group took a risk, but
nevertheless a savvy one, in greenlighting three productions directed by women
released in the US in 2019: Charlie’s
Angels (sadly a flop), Little Women and the riskiest of all, A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood, a fictional film inspired by journalist Tom
Junod’s profile ‘Can you say… hero?’ of children’s television host Fred Rogers,
published in Esquire Magazine in November 1998. Tell a studio executive that
you want to make a biography of Mister Rogers and then show them a photograph
so there is no confusing him with cowboy star Roy Rogers, you might field the
question, ‘what did he do?’ ‘He entertained children with puppets and talked to
them through the camera about difficult stuff and won three daytime Emmy awards
and sang songs including the theme of his own show,’ you might answer. ‘But
what did he change?’ The question is like an accusation. Mister Rogers impact
was very personal. He was a great explainer who used puppets to represent
children’s curiosity and their struggle to understand the ways in which adults
interacted. He probably defined the phrase, ‘teachable moment’.
The screenwriters
Micah Fitzerman-Blue and Noah Harpster answer the question by turning the
journalist interviewing Mister Rogers into the protagonist. Tom Junod is
replaced by the fictional Lloyd Vogel (Matthew Rhys), a new father with
unresolved issues concerning his own dad. Cynical journalist Lloyd has a
difficulty with forgiveness. I am not going to say whether Mister Rogers as expertly
portrayed by Tom Hanks teaches Lloyd to let go of his anger or
indeed how the lesson is delivered, but this is the crux of the movie.
If you were to
identify the perfect director for this subject, you might hire Spike Jonze (Where the Wild Things Are) or Michel Gondry (Be Kind Rewind). Both directors have worked with puppets
and blended an artificial and realistic aesthetic. However, the studio chose
Marielle Heller. Her previous two films, The Diary of a Teenage Girl and Can You Ever
Forgive Me, have given her the
tag of a director who makes films about writers.
Heller does the
Jonze/Gondry puppetry stuff just fine. This is a film that turns the Tri-Star
[studio] anthem into a tune that would lull a new-born to sleep. It opens with
a toy cityscape representing Pittsburgh where Mister Rogers tapes his show.
Mister Rogers – his wife, Joanne (Maryann Plunkett) calls him ‘Rodge’ – enters through
the front door and trades a suit jacket for a cardigan, then removing his
outdoor shoes. The transformation is important because he represents the man of
the house switching roles from ‘breadwinner’ to ‘dad’. There is an anomaly.
Mister Rogers is singing, ‘it’s a beautiful day in the neighbourhood’, that is,
the start of something. If he has just been to work, how is this so? In effect,
when he enters ‘home’, he is turning back the clock to the morning and to his
childhood self, the one that enters ‘a magical world of make believe’. It
should also be noted that Mister Rogers takes his puppets with him when he
travels, where you or I might take underwear. You can’t use underwear to enter
a magical world of make believe, let me tell you.
Fitzerman-Blue and
Harpster take the best of Junod’s observations and give them an emotional and
narrative context in fiction. At one point, in both the article and the film,
Mister Rogers asks a dying man to pray for him, observing that the man is
closer to God than he [Mister Rogers] is. It is a gesture that makes you
marvel.
The opening is a
pastiche of Mister Rogers’ show, down to the opening of windows showing Lady
Aberlin (Maddie Corman), a visitor to the neighbourhood, and the mailman, Mr
McFeely (Daniel Krell). ‘He always says, ‘speedy delivery’,’ Mister Rogers
reminds his viewers. Then, he opens another flap on his ‘wall’ to reveal a
picture of Lloyd, the bridge of whose nose is bloodied. It is a picture
disturbing to a child, but no child is watching – we are. We then meet Lloyd at
an awards ceremony, where he describes journalists as ‘fellow misfits.’
Lloyd, we discover,
has just been invited to his sister’s third wedding. The groom is Todd, played
by co-writer Harpster. When he hears from his wife, Andrea (Susan Kelechi
Watson) that his sister Lorraine (Tammy Blanchard) has invited his father,
Jerry (Chris Cooper) to the ceremony, Lloyd wants to skip it. ‘What’s the point
of having a baby if you can’t use it to avoid social occasions?’ he asks
rhetorically. Of course, Lloyd doesn’t dodge the wedding, but he has daddy
issues of his own, floundering when trying to install a child’s car seat in the
back of a cab. Passing him baby Austin to hold, Andrea fastens it with ease.
They travel through
a toy New York cityscape (complete with Twin Towers) to the wedding venue where
Jerry is walking Lorraine down the aisle. He shoots a little gesture of ‘catch
you later’ to Lloyd, making the seasoned journalist wince. At the wedding dinner,
Jerry performs a song for the newly-weds, ‘Something Stupid’. It is an
embarrassing dad’s performance, that doubly makes Lloyd wince when Jerry points
to him and croons, ‘I love you’. At the reception, Jerry sidles up to Lloyd and
his family, drink in hand. ‘Can you give us a moment, doll?’ he asks Andrea.
‘She’s not a doll, she’s a Public Interest Attorney,’ snaps Lloyd. When Jerry
mentions Lloyd’s mother – ‘she wasn’t a saint’ – Lloyd lets fly, resulting in
the injury that we see at the film’s opening. ‘You were out of control in
there,’ Andrea admonishes Lloyd. ‘You should make amends.’ ‘I am making amends.
I offered to pay for Lorraine’s dry cleaning,’ Lloyd replies. The dialogue has
a situation comedy finesse.
Back in his studio,
talking to us, Mister Rogers hears a knock at the door. It’s the mailman, Mr
McFeely. ‘Speedy delivery,’ he exclaims. Mr McFeely has brought a video
cassette that explains how magazines are made. Do we want to see it? ‘Let’s
watch it on Picture Picture.’ Mister Rogers leads us to an imitation Vincent
Van Gogh painting, that is raised to reveal a television screen. Yes, reader,
we do learn how magazines are made. Mister Rogers remarks that the ink looks
like mustard. We see the people who write for the magazines and plan its
design. We then see Lloyd heading to the office of his editor, Ellen (Christine
Lahti). She is preparing an issue of Esquire Magazine on heroes and commissions
Lloyd to write 400 words on Fred Rogers. ‘You hired me as an investigative
journalist. This is not what I do,’ Lloyd complains. ‘I hired you as a writer.
Now write.’ She tells him Fred Rogers is the only hero who agreed to be
interviewed by Lloyd. ‘People like me,’ Lloyd counters. ‘They like you, then
they read what you write about them,’ Ellen tells him. When Andrea hears about
Lloyd’s new assignment, she pleads, ‘please don’t ruin my childhood’.
The rest of the film
describes the interactions between Lloyd and Fred: their initial telephone
conversation when Lloyd returns home to a house full of babies (and their
mothers); Lloyd’s trip to Pittsburgh where he attends a recording of the show;
and a meeting in New York where Mister Rogers is also filming, watching female
musicians by plucking the strings of their instruments, a pizzicato. At the
same time, Lloyd avoids his father who is very eager to talk to him.
The film shows Fred
welcoming visitors to his neighbourhood before every recording, children
accompanied by their parents, sometimes very awkward. One sickly young boy
doesn’t acknowledge Mister Rogers but swings his toy sword back and forth,
hitting the leg of his father. Mister Rogers talks to him in a steady, patient
voice. ‘That sword must be very heavy. You must be very strong. On the outside
and on the inside.’ As if a spell had been broken, the boy drops the sword and
hugs Mister Rogers. ‘Can I take your picture?’ he asks the family group. ‘I
like to take pictures of everyone who visits the neighbourhood.’ You might
think: what is he, the CIA? But Fred likes his own reminder of what he does. He
curves his back as he takes the photograph. Then he acknowledges Lloyd.
Fred, we discover,
is easily distracted. He also likes his own foolishness, as when he introduces
his next activity. ‘This is a tent. Let’s put it up.’ Mister Rogers struggles
unsuccessfully to press down on the top of the tent so that it pops into shape.
‘Perhaps this is a two-person tent,’ he concludes. The director isn’t sure
about the scene, but Mister Rogers likes it. ‘It is a reminder that adults
can’t always do things.’
You might conclude
that Mister Rogers – and the film – is a bit patronising. However, it is
wholeheartedly sincere. In fact, it dials down on some of Fred’s behaviour,
notably his calls to prayer. Fred isn’t like anyone Lloyd has ever met. In a
restaurant, he invites Lloyd to join him in a minute of silence. The
restaurant’s other patrons join in. The scene takes thirty seconds to watch. It
concludes with Fred thanking Lloyd. Whenever Lloyd tries to get behind Mister
Rogers’ public persona, Fred deflects. When Lloyd remarks that it must have
been a burden on his two sons to grow up with such a famous father, Fred agrees
and thanks him for his observation. In another scene, taken straight from the
article, Fred asks Lloyd about his favourite toy growing up. ‘Old Rabbit,’
Lloyd explains. Adopting the voice of the shiest of his puppets, Fred remarks,
‘I’d like to meet Old Rabbit,’ a line that might just reach cult status. At his
most troubled, Lloyd finds himself invited into Mister Rogers television and
addressed by a puppet - not King Friday the 13th, though.
Mister Rogers has
something in common with two of Hanks’ other performances: Forrest Gump and
Walt Disney (he played the latter in Saving Mr Banks).
Fred, like Forrest and Walt, lives in a bubble of optimism, certain of his own
opinion, trusting in his own instincts. Hanks has often been incorrectly
described as an everyman, only capable of ordinary bravery. His best
performances, of which this is one, show that he has arrived at some inner
peace. He has more in common with Jeff Bridges than any other Hollywood actor –
minus the gruff delivery.
Fred is indulged
like a child, frustrating his director. He has a minder of sorts, Bill Isler
(Enrico Colantoni) who is protective of him. ‘Fred likes everybody,’ Bill tells
Lloyd, ‘but he likes people like you the best.’ ‘People like me?’ ‘Broken
people.’ When Lloyd mentions this to Fred, he replies, ‘I don’t think you’re
broken.’ Fred never tells people the truth, rather offers a version of
themselves that they would like to believe in. This is a familiar technique
used by politicians, but Fred isn’t asking for a vote. His enthusiasm is
unconditional.
A Beautiful Day in
the Neighborhood doesn’t have a
big cathartic finish. Instead it leaves us with an image of Fred Rogers alone,
hitting a bunch of piano keys. We don’t know what it costs him to spread
happiness – but it costs him something. The ending is spoilt by a poor piece of
shoe continuity. We see Mister Rogers conclude his show and take off his indoor
shoes. Yet when he is on the other side of his front door, he has his outdoor
shoes on. However, this imperfection is okay. Just as the film explores
forgiveness, so we forgive its flaws.
The film won’t join Hustlers and Little Women in the $100 million club. However, its $61
million gross to date since its release in November 2019 is respectable. Mister
Rogers isn’t an icon outside of the United States; even with its unabashed
optimism, the film doesn’t appeal to international audiences, lasting only a
week in UK cinemas. Heller, a former actress, proves herself an actor’s
director. Melissa McCarthy earned an Oscar nomination in Heller’s last film, Can You Ever Forgive Me just as Tom Hanks has earned one for this.
Heller’s three films are all tonally different, showing her range. She has
proven herself, earning her next shot at a major Hollywood film.
Reviewed at
Cineworld West India Quay, East London, Tuesday February 4th, 2020.
17:00 screening
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