Directed by: Sam Mendes
Starring: Leonardo DiCaprio, Kate Winslet, Michael Shannon, Kathy Bates, Kathryn Hahn, David Harbour
A Titanic reunion featuring Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet in a story about 1950's suburban angst? Directed by Oscar winner Sam Mendes, who made American Beauty, also about said angst? Let the Oscar nominations flow. However, Revolutionary Road mustered a Best Supporting Oscar nod for Michael Shannon and that was it. It was almost too Oscar-baity even for an Academy that falls for Oscar bait often.
The movie itself was wonderfully photographed and acted, but after a while I grew tired of listening to people jabber on about problems 99 percent of the world wished it had to contend with. Frank Wheeler (DiCaprio) and wife April (Winslet) live a comfortable life in a new Connecticut home with Frank holding down a job at a Manhattan company which pays well. They have two children who play little into their daily concerns and aren't seen much. Frank goes to work daily while April stays home to be a homemaker and mother to the kids. Yet, April yearns for more. She feels Frank gave up on his dream of being a writer and wants to move to Paris so Frank can write and April can work in civil service. For a time, she's able to talk Frank into agreeing to the move, but then Frank is offered a promotion at work and he second-guesses his decision much to April's horror.
So Frank and April fight, and they reconcile. Frank cheats on April with various women in the secretary pool at work, and April is the apple of her neighbor's eye. Maybe Frank will be happier in Paris. April sure would. The kids? I can't say I recall their names. Then April becomes pregnant and thinks seriously about an abortion much to Frank's distress. April doesn't want to bring another child into this horrible world of suburban comfort and affluence. Frank wants the baby because now he'll have a third child to ignore and April will have another one to resent. I think you're getting the picture here.
I know, I know...April is suffocating in this 1950's world where women were expected to stay home while the husbands went to work. Oh, the horror. April wants to move to Paris where the roles will be reversed in a true case of believing the grass will be greener on the other side. But, when Frank and April bicker and fight over how horrible their lives are, I wish I could relate, as would most of the audience. DiCaprio and Winslet could shout at each other numbers from the phone book and be compelling, but their central arguments are ones which most people would reply, "Yeah, and?"