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Movie Review: Get Low (2010)

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Spectacular performances make up this 1930s drama

Robert Duvall in Get Low
Photo: Sony Pictures Classics

Set in the late 1930s, Get Low is based on an American folk tale, which is itself based on the true story of a hermit named Felix "Bush" that decides to throw himself a funeral party while he's still alive just "to hear what the preacher had to say about [him]." Screenwriter Chris Provenzano ("Mad Men"), with co-writer C. Gaby Mitchell (Blood Diamond), took that idea and went a bit further with it, searching for Felix's motivation. Why would someone hide themselves away for 40 years only to come out of hiding for a funeral party? Get Low has those answers and, thanks to sensational performances, tells one hell of a story.

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"Get Low" is a Sony Pictures Classics release, directed by Aaron Schneider and is rated PG-13 for some thematic material and brief violent content. The running time is 1 hour 40 minutes

The cast includes Robert Duvall, Bill Murray, Lucas Black, Sissy Spacek, Bill Cobbs, Gerald McRaney and Scott Cooper.

For more information on this film including pictures, trailers and a detailed synopsis choose from the following menu.

More About This Movie
Robert Duvall's performance here as Felix Bush has been talked about for almost a year now after the film first premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival in September 2009. Oscar was the word on everyone's lips at that time, but Duvall's chance at a second acting Oscar would have to wait a year. And here we are, the film and his performance has yet to lose any momentum in all that time and it's very much deserved.

Playing Felix, Duvall brings a rough-around-the-edges sincerity to a character we're first introduced to as something of a feared local legend. Most of the time the legend seems larger than the man himself even though the audience is never truly in on what it is Felix has done to earn his reputation in Roane County, Tennessee. Yet we quickly learn his mere presence in town is enough to start a tussle.

Felix is a crotchety old man with a secret. He needs to get something off his chest and he needs to do it before he dies. A funeral party while he's still alive appears to be the best way to force himself into doing it as something of a "now or never" situation. As a result, he recruits funeral home owner Frank Quinn (Bill Murray) and his young assistant Buddy Robinson (Lucas Black) to help him with the planning.

While Duvall does most of the dramatic heavy lifting throughout this film, it would be nothing without Murray's charisma and the sentiment Black brings to Buddy. It's just a shame for Black there aren't many roles suited for his style of acting, but his casting here was an absolute home run.

Directed by first time feature director Aaron Schneider, Get Low shows real promise for Schneider whose short film Two Soldiers won the Oscar in 2004 and now his first feature film six years later is likely to enjoy even larger praise. Get Low never stumbles although some may say it crawls at times. However the slow melodic nature of the story-telling is part of its charm. Had this film been trimmed any shorter and had the shots not lingered so long the story would have suffered.

There's a flow to this film that depends on each flicker of the candle and long ponderous look into the distance. Some of the melodramatic moments could have been snipped, such as a late night gravestone visit, as the emotional core of the story already existed, but it doesn't harm the film in any kind of a major way.

Acting kudos should also be given to Sissy Spacek and Bill Cobbs — the latter especially. Cobbs is an actor that rarely fails to deliver. I can't rattle off lists of films he's been in, but he has a way of bringing a character to life that makes you instantly want to trust him, and learn from him. There's knowledge and attitude behind those eyes and his short time on screen here adds just the right amount of life to his scenes.

Already discussed as a potential Oscar contender, you can count on Duvall's name being announced come time for Oscar nominations and I wouldn't count out some of the supporting cast just yet either. Get Low is dramatic comfort food. It goes down real easy, but also brings its emotional baggage along for the ride. I won't say it's a stand out perfect film, but it's one you'd be hard-pressed not to enjoy.

GRADE: B+
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  1. When's the last time DeNiro or Pacino has done work like this? Or Hackman? Congrats to Duvall for still gutting it out and giving us first class acting his whole life.

    • Pacino was great in You Don't Know Jack, even though it was his first great performance since Insomnia.

      • DeNiro went to a different route in the last 10 years, obviously to do more comedy. Many would say comedy roles are actually tougher than dramatic ones so I wouldn't exactly critisise him for taking a big risk and trying to go a new direction.

      • Other people have told me the same thing. I need to check that one out.

      • Hey maja, Righteous Kill, Stardust, Hide and Seek, Godsend, Showtime, The Score, 15 Minutes…These are not comedies…they are crap!

      • I'll give Pacino: Angels in America and You don't know Jack, but I'm not sure that makes up for Righteous Kill, 88 Minutes, Two for the Money, The Recruit, and Simone.

      • Stardust was great and so was De Niro in it, IMO. Can't disagree with the others, but oh well.

        BTW we also shouldn't forget Nicholson – accuse him of overacting all you want, but he gave a couple of great performances in the last decade. About Schmidt especially – that was brilliant. Great in The Departed too and fine job in everything else.

      • I think De Niro just decided to start following the paychecks and let his quality control monitor run out of batteries. I think he has somewhat squandered his reputation quite a bit since about 1995 onwards.

        I kinda suspect the same of Pacino, but to a slightly lesser degree as he still hasn't had quite the same prolific output the last ten years or so compared to De Niro.

    • Hackman I will let slide, he's friggin' 80 years old.

      • Hackman's retired. You won't see him in anymore movies unless he returns to acting. And i agree with you on how DeNiro and Pacino should return to better work. I mean DeNiro is one of my favorite actors.

  2. I'm becoming more and more interested in this movie as time passes. Don't think it'll get released theatrically here, but it's at the top of my "to watch" list.

  3. The Deniro Pacino thing is void for me. Look, considering their brilliance over 40 years, nothing can undo that work. Nothing.

    • I guess what you are saying is, since DeNiro and Pacino have done such brilliant movies in the past, that gives them a pass to do crap in thier later years. Maybe you're right, I don't know. But I would rather see DeNiro do nothing than to see him in movies like "Rocky and Bullwinkle"

  4. I would love to see this move. Unfortunately, it is limited release and is not available where I live.

    Does nyone understand the release process?

    Will I ever be able to see this movie?

    Thanks

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