Manic ‘Silver Linings Playbook’ is a Joy

by Eric Melin on November 21, 2012

in Reviews,Video Reviews

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silver-linings-playbook-movie-reviewBradley Cooper and Jennifer Lawrence star in the new quirky romantic comedy Silver Linings Playbook, which is getting lots of Oscar buzz. Especially since comedies are generally undervalued by awards voters, the attention is well deserved.

An undiagnosed bipolar man named Pat (an eye-opening Bradley Cooper) is released early from a mental institution with dreams of a quick rehabilitation and his life as he knew it will be back on track again. Nevermind the fact that he nearly beat a guy to death in a shower who was cheating with his wife.

Pat meets a young widowed woman named Tiffany (Jennifer Lawrence, showing some assured  comic chops) and he says the most blisteringly honest and insulting things to her. “I have no filter,” he says. Yeah, we noticed.

It may not sound like the recipe for a great romantic comedy, but Silver Linings Playbook is that and more.

Silver-Linings-Playbook-Movie-ReviewBradley Cooper is all forced optimism—a guy with no inner monologue, just a manic outer one, and a dangerous temper that essentially took him out of the game, so to speak.

Jennifer Lawrence plays a strange mix of shame and confidence as she pursues him in her own passive-aggressive way. The actors inhabit their roles with such a ferocious energy that even when the plot veers into familiar territory, Silver Linings Playbook still works.

The movie itself is bipolar, full of mounting tension and hilarity like a classic screwball comedy, but it’s all just barely skimming above a deep layer of darkness. Nobody has it figured out in this movie, least of all Pat’s lost best friend (John Ortiz) and his demanding wife (Julia Stiles) — or his disturbed pal Danny (Chris Tucker), whose desire to be free trumps his ability to play by the rules.

silver-linings-playbook-movie-reviewRobert De Niro turns in his best performance in years as Cooper’s OCD bookmaking Dad, spotlighting not just his great comic timing, but also a quiet sadness. Jacki Weaver holds the fragile heart of the whole movie in her hands, and her effervescent smile masks a genuine worry that is only glimpsed. Again there is the darkness just beneath the surface.

At its core, Silver Linings Playbook is a story about acceptance, and the strained father-son relationship is one of many themes that writer/director David O. Russell has skillfully baked into the content without feeling forced.

Just as he did in his 1994 debut Spanking the Monkey and the more broad 1996 independent comedy Flirting With Disaster, Russell revels in the disintegration of the core family unit of yesteryear. One shot of Cooper and Lawrence facing off against each other with a pseudo-happy family portrait in the background pretty much sums up the whole picture.

Silver-Linings-Playbook-2012-movie-reviewDavid O. Russell makes no apologies for the manic behavior of his characters, but rather looks at them with a empathetic eye, and that is a key reason Silver Linings Playbook works so effortlessly.

Silver Linings Playbook subscribes to a couple of romcom formulas towards the end, but the movie is never anything less than exhilarating, which is something that is missing from 99.9 percent of modern romcoms. Russell adapted the screenplay from Matthew Quick’s novel and he has a terrific ear for smart dialogue and quick pacing, just like the best comedies of the classic era.

The only difference is that Silver Linings Playbook celebrates the fringes and makes you root for dysfunction.

Eric is the Editor-in-Chief of Scene-Stealers.com, a Rotten Tomatoes-approved critic, and contributor for The Pitch. He’s former President of the KCFCC, and drummer for The Dead Girls, Ultimate Fakebook, and Truck Stop Love . He is also the 2013 Air Guitar World Champion Mean Melin, ranked 4th best of all-time. Eric goes to 11. Follow him at:

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{ 4 comments }

1 Heather Madden November 28, 2012 at 4:54 pm

I was fortunate enough to make it into the Austin Film Festival screening of this film, and my god it was worth the wait. David O. Russel has outdone himself with this beautiful portrayal of a dysfunctional family searching for a way to come together. Bradley Cooper has won me finally with his odd and hilarious character. Jennifer Lawrence is dashing as ever with the hysterical role of Tiffany, a depressed woman trying to find a way out of her issues. This whole film has powerhouse performances, a laugh-out-loud script with heart, and a way to get the audience attached to its likable characters. I definitely recommend this film to everyone, and you are sure to see this as Osacr buzz.

2 Eric Melin November 28, 2012 at 8:30 pm

It really is a winning movie, and its so easy to be cynical these days about romantic comedies, but this one does everything right almost effortlessly — and that’s pretty tough to do.

3 Marie December 12, 2012 at 6:30 pm

Good review. You incorrectly identified the actor that played Pat’s best friend as Anupam Kher…he played Dr. Patel. John Ortiz played the friend.

4 Eric Melin December 13, 2012 at 7:41 pm

Thanks–I apologize for the error.

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