A meditative, black-and-white exploration
about growing up, growing old, and accepting life’s defeats. Middle-of-the-road bachelor
David Grant (Will Forte) takes his indolent, cantankerous father on a road trip
to collect on a junk-mail flyer for a million dollars. David does it in the
hope that Woody (Bruce Dern) will stop wandering down the highway; Woody,
meanwhile, longs inexplicably to buy a truck with the proceeds. On the way,
they’ll stop off with family, scavenging after some of Woody’s non-existent
new-found riches, and try to rebuild a relationship built on mutual resentment.
A gentle elegy to the humdrum beauty of the American Midwest, Alexander Payne’s
direction is gentle and insightful; Kate Grant as crotchety, apple-faced wife/mother Kate and Breaking Bad's Bob Odenkirk's “go-getter” older brother round out the cast.
Dern’s performance netted him Best Actor at Cannes: passive yet expressive,
stubborn and scowl-y, the image that seems likely to stay with you is Woody trudging
slowly down that motorway, desperate to recapture a sense of agency. The film
takes its time and showcases few outright revelations, but as a slower-paced, more
naturalistic About Schmidt, Nebraska is a quietly touching and bittersweet. 7/10
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