MY OLD LADY (2014)
Directed by Israel
Horovitz
BBC Films, PG-13, 107
minutes
* * *
The British film My
Old Lady didn't do much at the box office in either Britain or North
America. It's easy to understand why, as it's a film for older audiences that
stars Maggie Smith, Kevin Kline, and Kristin Scott Thomas—all of whom are
decades past their A-list days. It's also a slight film with a terrible title
and a miscast lead (Smith). Despite numerous flaws, though, it's a better film
than its dismissive reviews would have you believe and is worth watching on a
night lacking better options.
The set up is that Mathias Gold (Kline) is an aging American
sad sack. He's not a loser per se; just one of those guys who suffers from
perpetual bad luck the way someone with stomach ulcers has constant heartburn.
He sells his New York City apartment and liquidates his scant resources to head
off to Paris to take possession of an apartment left to him by his estranged
(and emotionally absent) father. It's spacious, has a nice garden, and is
located in a highly desirable part of the Marais district—the sort of place one
can offload overnight for millions of Euros. That's exactly the plan—until
Mathias arrives and finds that it's occupied by a 90-year-old woman, Mathilde
Girard (Smith), and her middle-aged daughter, Chloé (Scott Thomas). When
Mathias gives them notice, he receives his father's final blow: the apartment
isn't technically his, nor was it entirely his father's to grant. It is covered
by a viager, a French law that not
only grants Mathilde life occupancy, but which also requires the apartment's
deed holder—now Mathias—to pay her a 2400 Euros per month stipend! Even worse,
as Mathias learns, the apartment came to his father through Mathilde, who was
his mistress all the time his mother was alive and after the death of
Mathilde's husband. Well that certainly explains why he spent so much time in
Paris! It also complicates his reactions to Chloé, who might actually be his
sister.
From here we have a pretty standard farce with all the usual
predicaments. Can Mathias disencumber himself of his wanted tenants? Where is
he going to get 2,400 Euros per month until he figures it out? What would he go
back to even if he had the cash? He and Chloé hate each other, or do they? How does
either of them deal with the hurt over the neglect they suffered due to their
parents' past freewheeling, bohemian lifestyle that left little room for
affection for children? And so on.
You could probably write the script Horovitz directed for
the simple reason that you've seen it before. For all of that, the film is
diverting and fun because both Kline and Scott Thomas make it so. They play
wounded older children well, especially as they grapple with the ways in which
they have revisited the sins of their parents. It helps that Kristin Scott
Thomas is fully bilingual and capable of playing a character caught between
worlds on numerous levels. Kline, who has always had a flair for comedy, is
also strong as a Yank bumbling his way across Paris and trying to make sense of
French language and bureaucracy—neither of which he has a prayer of mastering.
The weak link, surprisingly, is Maggie Smith. She's the right age and though we
get a rather obviously contrived throwaway line about how she was born in England
(No kidding!), for someone who has allegedly lived in Paris for much of her
life, she's about as French as a toaster muffin is English. Good for Mags that
she keeps getting parts at age 80, but as talented as she is, she's worn out
the role of crotchety dames like Downton
Abbey's Violet Crawley. We no longer see the character; we see Maggie Smith
playing that character. Moreover, the
role in My Old Lady demands an
actress that exudes more cultural sophistication than she provides, and it
really should have gone to an older French actress such as Emmanuelle Riva,
Claudia Cardinale (who is French, not Italian), or maybe even Jeanne Moreau. If
you must cast an English woman, how about someone with allure more in keeping
with the character's hippie-like past, such as Julie Christie (who, shockingly,
is now 75)? And for heaven's sake lose the patronizing title and rename the
film. Viager? The Arrangement? Living with Sins? Anything else!
Even with a better title and casting this would be little
more than a frothy romp, but such films have their place. So does this one. I
fully anticipated I'd hate this movie and switch it off after 20 minutes. I
didn't. Some nights all you need is a hundred minutes of non-taxing diversion.
Rob Weir
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