The Upside of Anger

2005

Action / Comedy / Drama

Plot summary


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Director

Top cast

Evan Rachel Wood Photo
Evan Rachel Wood as Lavender 'Popeye' Wolfmeyer
Kevin Costner Photo
Kevin Costner as Denny Davies
Keri Russell Photo
Keri Russell as Emily Wolfmeyer
Alicia Witt Photo
Alicia Witt as Hadley Wolfmeyer
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
1.05 GB
1280*534
English 2.0
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 56 min
P/S ...
2.15 GB
1920*800
English 5.1
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 56 min
P/S ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by gradyharp10 / 10

The Upside of Anger is that we learn about ourselves and change

Mike Binder both wrote and directed this searingly important film; important for its concept, for its ensemble acting, and for performances by Joan Allen and Kevin Costner that are now the gold standard for the year by which all other award quality performances must be judged.

Anger, and how it paralyzes our emotional outlook and alters our perception of reality and works to destroy those around us, is the harsh subject of this examination of a well-to-do family of husband, wife and four teenage daughters. The story is narrated by the youngest daughter Lavender 'Popeye' Wolfmeyer (Evan Rachel Wood) and never were the words 'out of the mouth of babes' so pertinent. The mother Terry (Joan Allen) is introduced drunk, constantly in her nightgown with glass of vodka in hand, and she pretty has spent her days in that manner since her husband Grey 'left her with his 22-year-old Swedish office girl' without a note, a call, or confrontation with his family. Terry is consumed with anger, self pity, loathing, and barely manages to maintain a household, completely relying on her four daughters to cook, clean, shop, etc while she finds reasons to berate them for every act and motivation the girls show. Hadley (Alicia Witt) is the oldest and enamored with a boy Terry considers a waste of time. Andy (Erica Christensen) doesn't want to go to college but to become a reporter instead - a fact Terry refuses to consider. Emily (Keri Russell) prefers to follow her dream of becoming a ballet dancer and attending an Arts College that, of course, Terry refuses to allow. Popeye, the youngest, is hungry for belonging and wants desperately to be noticed by not only her mother but by boys, etc.

A neighbor Denny Davies (Kevin Costner) is an alcoholic ex-baseball hero who now has a cheesy but popular radio talk show produced by his buddy Shep (Mike Binder, yes, the writer/director!). Denny has been friends of the Wolfmeyers for years and shows up drunk, warmly offering himself as a drinking partner to Terry. The two spend their time drinking and watching television and watching the daughters each arrive at crises: Hadley gets pregnant and announces her engagement to Terry after everyone else knows: rage from Terry and an embarrassing scene at Hadley's announcement dinner. Andy gets a job at Denny's radio show only to fall into bed with the lothario Shep: rage and a public fight from Terry. Emily somaticizes her career frustration and ends up in a hospital with an ulcer: self-pity and depression from Terry. Denny slowly works his way into Terry's bed and become a surrogate father/lover to these five father/husband-deserted women. The ending is a shocker and cannot be revealed because it would destroy the fine story line of the film. But it begins as it ends and that is the part that leaves the audience aghast that they didn't suspect that turn of event.

Binder's script and direction achieve the impossible: he is able to create a family in disarray, deal with every aspect of anger, desertion, family ties, mother/daughter love (though severely tested),the needs of the 'victim' and how they can be tended. Amazingly he does this with a large does of comedy, acerbic dialogue, restrained responses, and a keen grasp of reality that makes this a film about a tough subject one that is engrossing and never off-putting.

The entire cast is pitch perfect: each of the actors who portray the daughters is exceptional. But the brilliance that radiates from the screen is the triumphant performance by Joan Allen. She inhabits Terry and despite the fact that she has every reason to make us loathe her character, she manages to keep her portrayal so sensitively nuanced that we stay close to her in this journey. She is simply amazing in her body language, her understanding of alcoholic behavior patterns, and her internalization of her needs at the expense of her ever-surfacing rage. Much the same can be said for Kevin Costner who gives the finest performance of his career in a role that could be pathetic and negative in the hands of a less capable actor. His comedic talents shine, but not at the expense of his enormous sensitivity to the five women with whom he ends up living.

Alexandre Desplat has once again created a movie score that has perfectly beautiful passages of music while always underlining the story appropriately. The cinematography by Richard Greatrex finds the perfect vantages that seem like windows in the hearts of each of the participants in the story. Highly Recommended.

Reviewed by claudio_carvalho6 / 10

Unconventional Fable About a Bitter Mother and her Misplaced Anger

In the suburb of Detroit, the upper middle class Terry Ann Wolfmeyer (Joan Allen) becomes a bitter woman when her husband apparently leaves her family and her, traveling with his Swedish secretary to her country. Her neighbor and close friend of the family, the lonely retired baseball player Denny Davies (Kevin Costner) and presently working in a talk-show in a radio, continues visiting Terry and her daughters, and drinking with Terry. Denny falls in love for Terry, but the wounded and full of anger Terry try to avoid a steady relationship with him. Meanwhile, life does not stop, and her daughters graduate, date, marry, sicken, as part of the dynamics of a family. Many years later, a profound secret is revealed.

"The Upside of Anger" is an unconventional fable about a woman that becomes bitter, quite drunkard and full of an absolutely misplaced anger. The dramatic story, the situation and the characters are very real and credible, what is very rare in a romance, and the movie does not have usual clichés. The theme is very interesting, and many times people feel anger for something but do not investigate the reasons and motive for that thing happens, the truth behind the happening. In this movie, the unexpected plot point gives a strong twist in the narrative. Further, families raise sons and daughters giving the same treatment and education, but personalities make people very different, like Terry's daughters. The awesome Joan Allen steals the movie, as usual, although the whole cast has great performances. There are some funny scenes, like for example when Adam 'Shep' Goodman (Mike Binder) is making noise while eating soup with Terry's family; or when Denny surprises Terry in the bathroom. I believe this film deserves to be watched a second time for a deeper analysis of the behavior of each character. My vote is six.

Title (Brazil): "A Outra Face da Raiva" ("The Other Face of the Anger")

Reviewed by edwagreen6 / 10

Downsizing the Upside of Anger **1/2

Joan Allen, as an alcoholic depressed wife whose husband supposedly walks out on her, sets the stage for "The Upside of Anger."

Whoever made Allen up for this film was thinking of performance as Pat Nixon. She looks remarkably like the former first lady that she portrayed some years back.

In the film, Allen has four daughters and soon becomes involved with her neighbor Kevin Costner. He is a drinker and a former baseball player on a radio talk show.

Allen is moody and acts the part to the hilt. One daughter, who graduates from college, tells her on graduation day that she is pregnant and getting married to the father. Allen and the others are invited to lunch by the prospective groom's father. Here, we get a tinge of mid-western anti-semitism by Allen's reaction-"You're not Jews," once she hears there is a Dave Jr. Besides the name, the family doesn't happen to be Jewish anyway.

As in "Terms of Endearmnent," we have a near cancer scare when the older daughter is hospitalized with stomach pains which turns out to be caused by stress. What is going on in this film is enough to give anyone stress. That same daughter uses the 4 letter word to describe her mother, while another daughter works at the radio station, only to sleep around with the producer, a nice supporting acting performance by the film's director Mike Binder. The Allen character invariably has it out with the "Shep" (Binder) and slaps him across the face at the other daughter's wedding. Later, at a supermarket, Shep is ready to seduce Allen. At this point, I was thinking of Mrs. Robinson revisited.

The film starts off with a funeral before going the flash back route. All will begin to come together when a digging uncovers a family tragedy.

The picture deals with anger making us the people we are. Rather, we are products as well of such hostility.

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