A One Mann’s Movies review of “Life Itself” (2018).

Bob the Movie Man’s Rating:

Certification:

UK: 15; US: R.

Not the documentary of the same name from 2014 about the critic Rogert Ebert. This is an Amazon Studios/Sky Cinema Original Film (trying to follow where Netflix is boldly going), and as such it only had a very limited release in UK cinemas which I managed to miss. 

The plot.

This is an anthology film in the style of “Crash” or – actually, “Love Actually” – featuring a series of inter-linked stories. We start with a depressed Will (Oscar Isaac) flashing back to his apparently idyllic life with pregnant wife Abby (Olivia Wilde). Apparantly?  Well, perhaps the narrator is unreliable. So what actually happened? Where is Abby now? Where is his child? 

Hold your friends close and your loved ones closer. Olivia Cooke and Oscar Isaac go for a stroll. (Source: GEM Entertainment).

Mid-film we switch into a Spanish-language section, set in Spain, featuring an ambitious olive-picker Javier González (Sergio Peris-Mencheta), his sweetheart Isabel (Laia Costa) and his employer Mr. Saccione (Antonio Banderas). 

(“What the F!”, you are saying to yourself at this point, “How is this all related?”).

Where the hell do they fit in? Isabel (Laia Costa) and Javier (Sergio Peris-Mencheta) fall in love. (Source: GEM Entertainment).

To say any more would provide spoilers: but, confused as you may be, it’s a journey worth sticking with. 

Messing with time and your mind.

The film plays fast and loose with chronology and we zap backwards and forwards through the story which can be unsettling. It’s a film that keeps you on your toes, and you need to listen to director/writer Dan Fogelman‘s dialogue as there are clues as to where you are going next. It’s certainly not the ‘sit-back-and-relax’ “rom-com” that I mistakenly sold it to my wife as for our evening viewing! 

A star of the film is the editor Julie Monroe (“Midnight Special“). There are some significant twists in the film, some of which are well signposted; others very much not so!

Olive skinned and olive grower. Antonio Banderas considers life. (Source: GEM Entertainment).

The turns

Has Oscar Isaac done a bad film? (I’m sure some haters of the latest Star Wars episodes might have an answer!). Here he has to execute an enormous range and he just about pulls it off. Olivia Wilde is also convincing as Abby. 

Rising star Olivia Cooke as Dylan. (Source: GEM Entertainment).

In the Spanish section, Antonio Banderas is as impressive as you expect, and Laia Costa – an actress not previously known to me – is initially good as the young love interest, but I thought she was rather over-extended in the later scenes in her story. 

Elsewhere, the rising star Olivia Cooke again impresses as a troubled teen; Annette Bening is a psychologist; “Homeland”‘s Mandy Patinkin plays Will’s father; and an f-ing and blinding Samuel L Jackson even appears at the start of the film (a blink and you’d miss it line of dialogue explains the context). 

Older and wiser? Dr Morris (Annette Bening) and Will (Oscar Isaac). (Source: GEM Entertainment).

Good?

I wasn’t expecting to, but I really enjoyed this one. I’ve read some completely eviscerating reviews of the movie, but I’ve not sure where those were coming from.  I found it a non-standard journey requiring a level of intelligence to appreciate the nuances of the script. My guess would be that many of the naysayers on IMDB never made it past the Spanish interlude. Others will not have liked the coincidence in the final reel (no spoilers). I do appreciate that it needs a suspension of belief. But this is a movie about the random coincidences of life. I remember running into a work colleague on the backstreets of Lone Pine in California, 5,271 miles away from where we both worked. Coincidences DO happen.

I’m not a fan of this whole new “almost straight to streaming” approach: I wish I could have seen this one on the big screen. But my view would be that it’s well worth catching if you have access to Amazon or Sky services (Sky or Now TV in the UK).     

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Trailer:

3/5. The trailer actually deftly avoids significant spoilers, but paints the film as far more of a rom-com than it actually is.  I can see why I was dishing out duff marital information!  

By bobwp

Dr Bob Mann lives in Hampshire in the UK. Now retired from his job as an IT professional, he is owner of One Mann's Movies and an enthusiastic reviewer of movies as "Bob the Movie Man". Bob is also a regular film reviewer on BBC Radio Solent.

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