Hope Davis

Disconnect

First Hit:  A very good, interesting, powerful film about how our digital connections, and how we use them, can damage our lives.

This is a film about three stories: A son attempting suicide because of a picture of him nude was posted on the internet. Another about young kids who’ve runaway from home and make a living selling themselves for private sex over the internet. And, finally a couple whose personal tragedy grew to include identification theft, but this difficulty helped them grow closer together.

Each of these stories was based in today’s reality. The point of these stories was how technology creates new ways for us to communicate and do it poorly.

Rich and Lydia Boyd (Jason Bateman and Hope Davis respectively) have a daughter Abby (Haley Ramm) who is popular at school while her brother Ben (Jonah Bobo) is a loner who loves music and keeps to himself both at school and at home. Two boys, using technology, decide to harass Ben. They make up a girl that likes him and encourage him to do something stupid. A television interviewer wants to expose young kids selling sex over the internet. By getting more involved creates complications for both the person she’s trying to help and herself.

Derek and Cindy Hull (Alexander Skarsgard and Paula Patton respectively) have just lost a young son and turn to internet activities to soothe their pain, her a chat room, him online gambling. Their identity gets stolen and now they are losing everything except themselves. T

wo of the three stories are interwoven with Mike Dixon (Frank Grillo) who is a former cop who has turned to internet sleuthing and remedy.

Bateman is great as a father who loves his son but has gotten so involved with work; he lost his family connection and tries to get it back. Davis is strong as the mom who is trying to get her husband to pay attention to the family. Ramm is good as Ben’s sister, a brother she loves but is also embarrassed by his awkwardness. Bobo is fantastic as the boy who is so scared of showing up and lives within the world of his music. Skarsgard is really good as the father who has lost a child and doesn’t know how to reach out to his hurting wife. Patton is fantastic as the hurting mother who is looking for a way to find emotional relief. Grillo is very good as the single parent trying to do right by his son. Colin Ford as Grillo’s son did a superb job of showing his angst, sorrow and fear for his actions. Andrea Riseborough was really good as the reporter knowing she wanted to help but also wanting a story. Max Thieriot was fabulous as the young kid just finding his own way. Andrew Stern wrote an outstanding script. Henry Alex Rubin directed this three story film with precision and wonder.

Overall:  This was a really good film and deserves to be seen by a lot of people who don’t get how technology has changed our lives.

Charlie Bartlett

First Hit: A very mediocre Rushmore or Ferris Bueller’s Day Off.

Although Anton Yelchin, as Charlie Bartlett, did a fairly good job of being a bizarre unreal high school student, this film did not hold together nor was it believable.

Kat Dennings is the most solid character in this film however her Principle dad, (played by Robert Downey Jr.) was out of place and I couldn’t help but wonder why Downey would do such a film.

The plot centers around Charlie who has been kicked out of every private school because he has a difficult time fitting in. He gets good grades at these schools but other behaviors (making and selling fake IDs) are not the kind of behaviors blue blood schools can tolerate.

His uptight, pill popping mother (played by Hope Davis) decides to send him to public school. Immediately, he notices he doesn’t fit in and gets beat up by a bully. However, Charlie is too smart for these kids and figures out a way to become the focus of attention. He does this by prescribing legal prescription drugs he obtains by tricking a litany of psychologists that he has all these symptoms to which they give him unending prescriptions.

This makes Charlie popular with the kids because he listens to the kids and gives them drugs for a small fee.

He falls in love with Susan Gardner (Kat Dennings) who is being raised by her father Principal Gardner (Downey). Principal Gardner is having a hard time being Principal and has taken to drinking again.

This film becomes a war between Charlie and the Principal.

Overall: This is a poor imitation of other films and a waste of Downey and Davis’ abilities. However the introduction of Dennings was a bright spot.

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