The bigger question is not if we need romantic comedies about older
people, which is a matter of age, but if we need romantic comedies at all…In
that case we speak the genre.
I’d like to speak about genre AND
age, although when the film is what Brazilians call “sugared water” it’s not
interesting no matter what age it covers or what genre it is.
You may enjoy most contemporary
“rom-com” if you love a spark between two people, then a parental or ex’s or
society’s disapproval, or, alternatively, a misunderstanding, and after a bit
of a mess a happy ending, you are going to enjoy yourself in most romantic
comedies. But I want my water pure and my romantic comedies smart and funny.
Despite past disappointments, I watched the film Words and Pictures (2013). I couldn't resist the cast, especially Juliette Binoche and Clive Owen.
If there was any chance I'd enjoy a romantic comedy it would have been one with
them. Also, it was about people who are over 40. The Director, Fred Schepisi
and the writer, Gerald Di Pego have done interesting work in the past.
Another chance to enjoy a movie of this kind: if it didn't take itself
seriously.
Well, I didn't enjoy it very much.
Some parts were better than others. The idea of aged and imperfect
lovers is cool. But...Well, the story goes like this: an alcoholic poet and
teacher Jack Marcus is testing his relationships and losing his credibility.
His bitterness emerges everywhere including the classroom.
A debilitated with rheumatism, painter and teacher Dina Delsanto comes
to the little town college due to her worsening state of health. She is a rigid
but excellent teacher.
They meet. One brings words, the other pictures, and through their
students, who become better people thanks to it, they compete and tease and
flirt and do what people do in a romantic comedy.
I think that because it was about 40+ aged people I was hoping for more
depth and subtlety, and better humor.
My wise friends, who understand
cinema and read a lot and create their own stories, books, scripts and plays
expressed their opinions, and I’m proudly quote them here.
Andrew Tibbett, for instance says: I like that cast and that director a
lot. It's too bad the film couldn't find a better spin on the genre. I like
that cast and that director a lot. It's too bad the film couldn't find a better
spin on the genre.
Younger romcoms seem more willing to be funny. The older ones with Diane
Keaten and Merle Streep and the like appear to take themselves too seriously.
As you say, if ever a genre needed to NOT take itself seriously its this one.
Since loads of marriages are falling apart, I think older people are out
there romancing and so it's a good idea to make films about that. But how to do
it? Maybe it might work to go the complete other direction: very serious, like
Hanke's Amour? Hardly a romcom, but...
The specific trouble with older love is that people are more set in
their ways, more battle-scarred so it's harder to give yourself. Perhaps that's
the route to explore. I like the new sitcom "You're the Worst". It's
not about older people, but it is about cranky cranky cranky people who really
DO NOT want to be in a lovely dove relationship and yet that is what happens to
them. So, perhaps the older folks should resist more and fail more. That might
be a better vein for comedy.It's almost if the romantic comedies de nos jours had
been processed through TV and sitcoms.
Jonas Knutsson says: One reason [for the decline in the genre) is that
so many of the hurdles that were used to set up these plots have (mercifully)
disappeared, another being that there isn't really much of a culture of romance
these days and it's difficult to pluck these things from the ether. I believe
the writer of the British TV series "Yes, Minister" and "Yes,
Prime Minister" wrote an article, making pretty much the same point. It's
just very difficult to come up with a plausible Capulets-and-Montagues scenario
in my neck of the woods.
He adds that “they” did this stuff so well in the sixties and seventies:
"Two for the Road", "Pete 'n' Tillie", "Loving",
"Blume in Love". The list goes on.
“Pete 'n' Tillie” had some bleak moments but I think the
sixties/seventies style didn't require a light touch for every scene. As I
recall, the film had a lot of the sort of wisecracks that people make in
ordinary life.
A lot of the Elliot Gould flicks of the seventies would probably be
classified as "relationship flicks" today, as would "Two for the
Road".
Frank J. Hutton says: Probably,
romantic comedies about 40+ people are needed, since there are 40+ people
who're romantic and funny and like that sort of thing. The problem, I think, is
that most of the movies just aren't any good.
Thinking back, I rather enjoyed the two with Jack Nicholson -- the one
with Dianne Keaton and the other with Helen Hunt. If I recall, they seemed more
honest than not and were genuinely funny in places, not all jacked up and
shrill like most comedies are these days.
I'm not much for sentimental nonsense unless it's great vintage
sentimental nonsense, in which case I'm a sucker and all bets are off. Until my
late teens, I'd a definite predilection towards romantic melancholy, classic
and otherwise. I escaped it by my early 20's. For whatever reason, Two For the
Road always emblemized for me that certain yearning for repeated failure that
lurks at the heart of melancholy...It's just the one movie. There's something
about it. Probably that had something to do with by that time my parents had
divorced and then remarried each other, which 2nd time around wasn't at all for
the better. I could really wallow in that theme music and geez, Audrey Hepburn
and all...
And yeah, I was wondering that about 'Two For the Road' and was
thinking, 'You mean I was scarred into an adolescence of persistent melancholic
romantic failure by a rom-com?'
Tamara Lee says: I recently came upon this article in the Atlantic Romantic
Comedy is Dying
considering the end of romantic
comedies in favour of cinematic romance. Something I've noticed lately is an
increase in older women/younger man affair romances. The French Bright Days
Ahead comes to mind, but there seem to be quite a few.
I suppose the idea is the 40-year-old men are busy having affairs with
20 year girls, so the 40-year-old women need to also...
(I love her biting humor!)
She includes another excellent link to a new film, about a French older
woman and an American younger man 5 to 7 and introduces the question if the
French mind the typecasting. 5 to 7
Martin Heavisides says: If you broaden the scope a bit (which contemporary examples, which can be called, to distinguish their indistinguishibility, Rom Coms, generally do not) a number of quite fine films are romantic comedies or contain elements of same.
Martin Heavisides says: If you broaden the scope a bit (which contemporary examples, which can be called, to distinguish their indistinguishibility, Rom Coms, generally do not) a number of quite fine films are romantic comedies or contain elements of same.
Les Enfant du Paradis
Le Roi du Coeur
Harold and Maude
Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
Afterglow
Addicted to Love
Joe Versus the Volcano
of which Afterglow involves over 40s in a key role, Les Enfant du
Paradis lovers who are young initially but approaching middle age when the
story ends, and Harold and Maude involves cross-generational romance with a
vengeance. But few romantic comedies are close to as odd or ambitious as these.
@@
After talking about it but especially after listening to these
intriguing people, I suppose that the basic answer is YES we want to explore
romance in this age and in any age, as we pass through the ages. What we want,
however, is not any romantic comedy but a romantic comedy that allows us to
recognize ourselves and others in it, appreciate the surprises and the humor
and go back to our own life films.