.
Feedback

Movie Review: Hope Springs

Meryl Streep and Tommy Lee Jones elevate what should be called ‘Mope Springs’: Marriage Melancholia

In a world where teenagers are the stars and films are green-lit based on the number of explosions, it behooves us adults to put our cinematic money where our mouths are and support films with actors who stand for the older members of the audience, especially when these actors represent the very height of thespian prowess. 

Hope Springs is about a couple, played by Meryl Streep and Tommy Lee Jones, who have been married for 31 years. They venture (at the behest of Streep's character) to Maine to attend a  week of intensive marriage counseling to try to bring back the intimacy missing in their relationship.  

Make no mistake. This is a movie that has the single worst marketing campaign of the year to date. Hope Springs is less Woody Allen and more Ingmar Bergman. It has its funny moments, most of which are summarized in the preview. It is, at heart, the dissection and examination of an inert marriage headed toward disaster, and the story of it finding or giving up its footing once and for all.

If fans of Streep and Jones are made aware of this before venturing into the theater, they are less likely to find themselves stumbling  about inside the black hole that is a long-lived uncommunicative marriage, and more likely to see the experience as an insightful, pointed and poignant take on what many couples face at some point in the long span of their years together. 

It isn't a comedy. It is a journey, beautifully acted by both, of two very lonely individuals who are suffering and struggling to find joy again, whether together or alone.

It is, be warned, largely an excruciating exercise. Some audiences may find it more amusing than others, but we (that is, Cinema Siren and Siren Spouse) were doing the Siren Squirm.   

Further, the musical soundtrack suggests no audience members over 50 have bought a CD in the last 20 years. Note to the music supervisors: A little creativity and exposure to new artists might not have gone amiss. We can take it…

Obviously, it is the lead actors for which we all show up to these two hours of therapy by proxy. Is it worth it? The script could and should have been more in keeping with the quality of the actors present. It is certainly a good first feature effort by TV writer Vanessa Taylor, but she missed several opportunities for catharsis and revelations relating to character motivation.   

Streep and Jones are two of the best actors onscreen of any generation, so they make up for the lack of verbal depth with their own skills, and make up for it they do, in spades. They are both so impressive to watch, they make the trip to the theater worth it, even with the many holes in the script.  

As long as those interested in seeing the film are made aware that it is a far more serious film that is sometimes quite difficult to watch, they will ultimately be rewarded by two great performances.  

The level of nuance, insight and realism offered by the actors is hard to come by in film. Support the talent putting everything they have onscreen by heading out to see them. If knowing the script doesn't rise to meet them causes hesitation, wait for the video. But do support them. They are the reason the young whippersnappers in Hollywood get a chance at real acting.  

They continue, after all these years, to show them how it's done. 

P.S.: In this weekend's other release, Bourne Legacy, featuring the awesome Jeremy Renner, the community of Reston makes a brief appearance onscreen!

Newsletter & Alerts

Get the best stories each day and important breaking news

Subscribe

Not from Herndon Patch? Find your Local Patch »

Note Article
Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
Jennifer van der Kleut (Editor) June 18, 2013 at 11:07 pm
Hi Craig - can you send me an email? I'll help get this figured out. Thanks!Read More jennifer.vanderkleut@patch.com
Jennifer van der Kleut (Editor) June 18, 2013 at 08:01 am
Awww, Dave! Anything specific? Believe me, no one's more rattled than me....but I think given timeRead More we'll all get used to it, as we do with anything. But if you're having trouble finding or figuring out how to use anything, please let me know!
Dave Webster June 18, 2013 at 02:51 pm
I preferred having the local voices scroll where you could see comments on the articles. I hadRead More some problem uploading my picture to my profile.
Bob Bruhns May 26, 2013 at 10:16 am
The problem is that we got tricked into overpriced and premature rail, when we should have startedRead More with Bus Rapid Transit. Had we done that, we could long ago have extended an efficient, dedicated-road bus system from Falls Church out further than Ashburn, and about now we might be converting that to rail from Falls Church to Tysons Corner. By avoiding the ridiculous price of the Silver Line Metrorail, we could also have extended a dedicated-road bus system out toward Centreville and Woodbridge by now as well. Take a look at the pricetag for the Silver Line - $6 Billion for one single Metrorail line on the north side of Fairfax County and into Loudoun County. We are juggling the books to borrow the needed money for that, and County taxes and the Dulles Toll Road tolls will be repaying the gargantuan borrowing until at least 2048 (that's 35 years from now). Existing roads, bridges and rail, need varying degrees of maintenance and expansion. We now have the NVTA and a transportation tax authorization (that we voted down in 2002, by the way), but don't expect our Metrorail line to be its central focus - our rail line is only one little line on the northern edge of our transportation district. NVTA will be looking at the transportation needs of ALL of Prince William, Loudoun, Fairfax and Arlington Counties, as well as the cities of Falls Church, Alexandria, Fairfax, Manassas, and Manassas Park. We need financially viable options - not overpriced, premature rail.
Mark Carolla May 27, 2013 at 02:12 pm
Hi Bob - "By avoiding the ridiculous price of the Silver Line Metrorail, we could also haveRead More extended a dedicated-road bus system out toward Centreville and Woodbridge." I won't address price because the finances of the Silver Line are another story...but actually, Bob, we already have or had Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) [See ---http://greatergreaterwashington.org/post/9600/brt-creep-makes-bus-rapid-transit-inferior-to-rail/] I used it for years commuting to the Pentagon: Metro and Connector Express Buses. There are pseudo light rail like stations at Herndon/Monroe St and there are supposedly bus lanes on the Toll Road. You saw how well that worked in getting people to get out of their cars. With population growth it didn't and it resulted in more paving. The bus lanes became HOV. You are correct that the Silver Line is but one line - and it will need bus connections - frequent and extensive connections - not just during rush hour -along with big parking lots. BRT is an attempt to replicate rail on the cheap - penny wise and pound foolish. Granted I have my prejudices: when I was trained as an Army Transportation Officer we were taught and observed through the years that flanged wheels on steel rails is the most efficient and economical way of moving large numbers of people and materiel. We have been neglecting multi-modal: rail, light rail, and bus for so long in favor of highway interests that we are now in a mess with a reputation as the nation's gridlock capital.
Bob Bruhns May 27, 2013 at 03:36 pm
So, Mark - you are advocating premature rail instead of Bus Rapid Transit, not because BRT is a badRead More solution, but because our governments don't do Bus Rapid Transit correctly. The huge financing problems that result are therefore not the price of transportation, they are the price of bad government. But it seems to me that if you can sell the concept of premature and massively expensive rail to our government leaders, you can sell the concept of properly-designed Bus Rapid Transit to them as well. I don't think that throwing big money at transportation is the solution. Consider the million-dollar bus 'super-stops' in Arlington County. For the budgeted $948,000 per stop, those should have been really nice bus stops - but they were a ridiculous and total disaster. WMATA and Arlington got together and came up with that nonsense, and now they have been investigating themselves about that for more than a month - with no results whatsoever. Clearly they just want to bury the story, and make us forget all about it. And consider the big transit center in Silver Spring, where the government and the contractors didn't take it seriously. Like WMATA and Arlington government, they saw transit construction as a big welfare delivery system just for them. I think that we should address the real problem - bad government - instead of overpaying for premature rail.