To Be Young Was Very
Heaven- Sally Field’s Hello, My Name Is Doris (2015)
DVD Review
By Sam Lowell
Hello, My Name Is Doris,
starring Sally Field, Max Greenfield, 2015
You know if you watch
enough movies and review them as well every once in a while a film will knock
you for a loop. Take the film under review Sally Field’s Hello, My Name Is Doris. Now usually when the subject of a film is
an older (oops, mature) woman who is involved romantically in any way with a
younger man the natural assumption is (or used to be) that he was “her kept
man,” “her handy man,” her rasping at faded youth, maybe a gigolo, maybe just
looking for the main chance or she was on a lark merely “robbing the cradle”
(the term used in my old corner boy neighborhood growing up but usually in
reverse). This one turns that idea, that 20th century older
woman pursuing a younger man idea in the early 21st century on
its head. Makes the whole thing of all things a romantic comedy-and socially
okay.
Now intergenerational sex
(or sexual attraction as here) has always been a thorny issue as mentioned
above. Here though mainly through AARP-worthy stalwart actor Sally Field’s
extraordinary performance as the Doris of the title makes the idea the stuff of
legitimate dreams. (Field, who for the oldsters reading this will
remember that she started as a flying nun in the 1960s, is thus no spring
chicken). Takes the new-fashion idea that 60 is the new, let’s say 40, and runs
with it.
Here’s the play. Doris is a
holdover from an old-line company which got bought up by some tech-savvy
outfit. One day John is introduced to the staff as the new art director and
thus starts Doris’ flights of fancy (although she had already “met” him in the
elevator coming up). Now Doris is starting out kind of dowdy, definitely not
“hip” having lived caring for her now departed aged mother on Staten Island.
And like mother an inveterate pack-rat. But she is smitten by John and come
hell or high water she after attending a “power of positive thinking seminar”
ready to rock the boat of her humble and dreary existence and make her
play.
This fantasy though would
only be a fantasy without the help of a feisty thirteen- year old granddaughter
of Doris’s best friend. You automatically know you are in the 21st century
because the way Doris will attempt to hook her man is via that feisty
granddaughter’s use of Facebook to find out what makes dear
John tick and that otherwise Doris would have been clueless if not for the
timely intervention. Problem: a young good-looking upwardly mobile guy in New
York City is not going to “friend” some dowdy AARPer so, like a lot of people
on the Internet they make up a fake profile for Doris. Bingo it
works.
Works better when she finds
out what his musical interests are and forms a live friendship through that
association. Problem” John is already spoke for by a beautiful younger woman.
Problem solved: that younger beauty breaks it off with John when she suspects
he is fooling around with some woman on the Internet. Uh, Sally of course.
Sally makes her big move but no way is John going for her except in her dreams
(and maybe at the end). What makes this one worth watching is how Sally Field
takes a tough subject and makes it seem totally normal and without overdoing
the sappy pulling for emotion part. Attention all AARPers see this one-younger
folks better ask your parents’ permission.
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