Dan In Real Life
Jan 11 2008 by The Journal
(1hr 38mins) Starring: Steve Carell, Juliette Binoche, Dave Cook. Director: Peter Hedges
Despite all the misfortunes and humiliations that litter the path to enduring happiness – catching extremities in a zip, falling for their comatose fiancé’s brother – these desperate singletons invariably snag Mr or Ms Right by the end credits, and seal the deal with a polished one-liner.
And when they wake the next morning and look in the mirror, it’s Kate Hudson or Matthew McConaughey, Sandra Bullock or Hugh Grant staring dreamily back at them. Life certainly sucks.
Dan In Real Life
Most importantly, the unlikely central pairing of Steve Carell and Juliette Binoche generates plentiful sparks of sexual chemistry that still smoulder after the film’s comic centre-piece – a delirious and farcical shower sequence.
Newspaper advice columnist Dan Burns (Carell) is about to be picked up for syndication.
His readers avidly devour every well-chosen word about the pressures of raising a balanced family. Sadly, Dan doesn’t always practice what he preaches.
Four years after the death of his wife, he still won’t glance at another woman and he is struggling to connect with his three daughters – 17-year-old Jane (Alison Pill) who is desperate for more driving lessons, 15-year-old Cara (Brittany Robertson) who is convinced she has fallen in love after just three days, and eight-year-old Lilly (Marlene Lawston).
Tensions flare during the annual family reunion, organised by Dan’s parents, played by the great John Mahoney and Dianne Wiest.
A visit to a local store to pick up the morning newspapers is a perfect excuse for Dan to take a much-needed time out, only for the columnist to meet beautiful stranger Marie (Juliette Binoche). The attraction is immediate.
Dan returns home in a state of exultation only to discover that Marie is the girlfriend of his brother Mitch (Dane Cook) and has been invited for the weekend too.
Dan In Real Life
Denial only makes Dan frustrated and irritable, so he tries a different tack – fanning the flames of jealousy by going on a blind date with family friend Ruthie ‘Pigface’ Draper.
Binoche is an excellent foil, with sterling support from the ensemble cast – not least the youngsters, who bring emotional depth and vulnerability to their disillusioned daughters. By turns hysterical and deeply touching, Hedges’ film breathes fresh air into a familiar slice of dysfunctional life.
